Emerging Adolescence: A Virtual Workshop
Emerging Adolescence: A Virtual Workshop
Adolescence is a key phase of life, marked by drastic biological and social changes. Yet, despite adolescence being such a transformational period of life, we know relatively little about it in past populations; the study of adolescence in biological anthropology has only recently emerged.
Emerging Adolescence: A Virtual Workshop was held on November 1 & 2, 2021. Hosted by Creighton Avery and Megan Brickley, this workshop brought together graduate students, emerging scholars, and faculty members, to discuss the study of adolescence, and how investigations of adolescence can enhance our understanding of the past more broadly.-
Emerging Adolescence in Bioarchaeology: Current…
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Pubertal Timing as a Measure of Health and a…
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Evaluating the Social and Cultural Implications…
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Adolescent Life in the 18th and 19th century…
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An Absent Adolescence? A Bioarchaeological…
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Becoming Adults: An investigation of dietary…
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Which comes first An investigation of pelvic vs.…
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Mobility and Adolescence in Neolithic France,…
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Is Adulthood Required Examining the Accuracy of…
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Baseline Models for Reconstructions the Lived…
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