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Archive | 2008

Microbial bioerosion of bone – a review

M.M.E. Jans

Microbial alteration is an important pathway for bone degradation. Organisms involved in bioerosion of bone, mainly bacteria, fungi and cyanobacteria, create different types of alteration. While fungi and cyanobacteria dissolve the bone matrix resulting in branching tunnels, bacteria create microscopical focal destructions with a complex morphology, reorganising the mineral rather than removing it. Different environmental and early post mortem circumstances characterise each type. Bacterial alteration occurs in the early post mortem interval, probably in the first decades after death. A strong link with putrefaction can be observed, indicating that early putrefactive organisms are important contributors to bacterial alteration of bone. Fungal and cyanobacterial alteration occurs when the environment is favourable, i.e., oxygen is present and bone still has sufficient nutrient value. Although microbial alteration causes loss of information in archaeological and palaeontological bone, the study of microbial bioerosion also represents a powerful tool for taphonomic reconstruction.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2004

Characterisation of microbial attack on archaeological bone

M.M.E. Jans; Christina M. Nielsen-Marsh; Colin I. Smith; Matthew J. Collins; H. Kars


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2007

Bone diagenesis in the European Holocene I: patterns and mechanisms

Colin I. Smith; Christina M. Nielsen-Marsh; M.M.E. Jans; Matthew J. Collins


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2005

Biochemical and physical correlates of DNA contamination in archaeological human bones and teeth excavated at Matera, Italy

M. Thomas P. Gilbert; Lars Rudbeck; Anders J. Hansen; Colin I. Smith; Kirsty Penkman; Kurt Prangenberg; Christina M. Nielsen-Marsh; M.M.E. Jans; Paul Arthur; Niels Lynnerup; Gordon Turner-Walker; Martin Biddle; Birthe Kjølbye-Biddle; Matthew J. Collins


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2007

Bone diagenesis in the European Holocene II: taphonomic and environmental considerations.

Christina M. Nielsen-Marsh; Colin I. Smith; M.M.E. Jans; Anders G. Nord; H. Kars; Matthew J. Collins


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2008

Reconstructing taphonomic histories using histological analysis.

Gordon Turner-Walker; M.M.E. Jans


Archaeometry | 2002

IN SITU PRESERVATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL BONE: A HISTOLOGICAL STUDY WITHIN A MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH

M.M.E. Jans; H. Kars; Christina M. Nielsen-Marsh; Colin I. Smith; Anders G. Nord; Paul Arthur; N. Earl


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2005

Diagenesis and survival of osteocalcin in archaeological bone

Colin I. Smith; Oliver E. Craig; R.V. Prigodich; Christina M. Nielsen-Marsh; M.M.E. Jans; Cees Vermeer; Matthew J. Collins


International Journal of Osteoarchaeology | 2012

What Happened Here? Bone Histology as a Tool in Decoding the Postmortem Histories of Archaeological Bone from Castricum, The Netherlands

H.I. Hollund; M.M.E. Jans; Matthew J. Collins; H. Kars; I. Joosten; Sm Kars


Archaeometry | 2013

TESTING AN ALTERNATIVE HIGH-THROUGHPUT TOOL FOR INVESTIGATING BONE DIAGENESIS: FTIR IN ATTENUATED TOTAL REFLECTION (ATR) MODE*

H.I. Hollund; Freek Ariese; Ricardo Fernandes; M.M.E. Jans; H. Kars

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H. Kars

VU University Amsterdam

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H.I. Hollund

VU University Amsterdam

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Gordon Turner-Walker

National Yunlin University of Science and Technology

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Freek Ariese

VU University Amsterdam

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