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Featured researches published by Neal Spencer.


PLOS ONE | 2014

On the Antiquity of Cancer: Evidence for Metastatic Carcinoma in a Young Man from Ancient Nubia (c. 1200BC)

Michaela Binder; Charlotte Roberts; Neal Spencer; Daniel Antoine; Caroline R. Cartwright

Cancer, one of the world’s leading causes of death today, remains almost absent relative to other pathological conditions, in the archaeological record, giving rise to the conclusion that the disease is mainly a product of modern living and increased longevity. This paper presents a male, young-adult individual from the archaeological site of Amara West in northern Sudan (c. 1200BC) displaying multiple, mainly osteolytic, lesions on the vertebrae, ribs, sternum, clavicles, scapulae, pelvis, and humeral and femoral heads. Following radiographic, microscopic and scanning electron microscopic (SEM) imaging of the lesions, and a consideration of differential diagnoses, a diagnosis of metastatic carcinoma secondary to an unknown soft tissue cancer is suggested. This represents the earliest complete example in the world of a human who suffered metastatic cancer to date. The study further draws its strength from modern analytical techniques applied to differential diagnoses and the fact that it is firmly rooted within a well-documented archaeological and historical context, thus providing new insights into the history and antiquity of the disease as well as its underlying causes and progression.


Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2015

The New Kingdom settlement of Amara West (Nubia, Sudan): mineralogical and chemical investigation of the ceramics

Michela Spataro; Marie Millet; Neal Spencer

Forty-three pottery samples from the New Kingdom site at Amara West in Nubia (Sudan) were analysed by optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry to identify pottery potentially produced at the site. Twenty-two samples from modern local alluvial soils, modern locally made pottery and archaeological material (mudbricks, daub, oven liners and kiln fragments), likely to have been made from locally sourced clays, were also studied. The analytically and microscopically defined pottery fabrics were cross-correlated with macroscopic fabrics defined on-site during fieldwork to demonstrate not only the potential and limitations of both approaches but also how the complementary datasets can provide new insights. The mineralogical and chemical analyses, of 65 samples, suggest that locally manufactured pottery included both Egyptian-style tableware and Nubian-style cooking pots. At the same time, the community at the site imported ceramics from a variety of different regions, including Egypt itself.


Environmental Archaeology | 2017

Holey Goats: Multiple Cases of Supratrochlear Foramina in the Humerus of Caprines from the New Kingdom Pharaonic Town of Amara West, Northern Sudan

Eleanor Williams; Jaco Weinstock; Neal Spencer

ABSTRACT Supratrochlear foramina (STF) were recorded in fifteen per cent of goat and sheep/goat humeri from the New Kingdom pharaonic town of Amara West, in modern northern Sudan. To the authors’ knowledge, this trait has never before been reported in the published literature for goats or sheep, whether from archaeological or modern contexts. The aim of this work is twofold: to contribute to the growing corpus of studies addressing the incidence and aetiology of STF, and to raise awareness for their possible presence in caprines, thus encouraging their identification and recording in archaeological assemblages.


Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2017

Mycenaean pottery from Amara West (Nubia, Sudan)

Michela Spataro; Anna Garnett; Andrew Shapland; Neal Spencer; H. Mommsen

Amara West, built around 1300 BC, was an administrative centre for the pharaonic colony of Upper Nubia. In addition to producing hand- and wheel-made pottery, respectively, in Nubian and Egyptian style, Amara West also imported a wide range of ceramics from Egypt and the eastern Mediterranean. A scientific study of 18 Mycenaean-style ceramics was undertaken to study provenance and aspects of production technology. Neutron activation analysis (NAA) results show that the pots were imported from several workshops in Greece and Cyprus. Thin-section petrography and scanning electron microscopy, used with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDX), show that different recipes were used to make the fabrics and paints of Mycenaean ceramics, reflecting both technological choices and the range of raw materials used in the different workshops. The petrographic and SEM-EDX results support the NAA provenance attributions.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2015

A new model of river dynamics, hydroclimatic change and human settlement in the Nile Valley derived from meta-analysis of the Holocene fluvial archive

Mark G. Macklin; Willem H. J. Toonen; J.C. Woodward; Martin Williams; Clément Flaux; Nick Marriner; Kathleen Nicoll; Gert Verstraeten; Neal Spencer; Derek Welsby


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2015

Shifting sediment sources in the world's longest river: A strontium isotope record for the Holocene Nile

J.C. Woodward; Mark G. Macklin; Laura Fielding; Ian L. Millar; Neal Spencer; Derek Welsby; Martin Williams


Archive | 2016

Living with a changing river and desert landscape at Amara West

J.C. Woodward; Mark G. Macklin; Neal Spencer; M. Binder; M. Dalton; S. Hay; Andrew Hardy


Archive | 2010

Priests and Temples: Pharaonic

Neal Spencer


The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017

Life in times of change – A bioarchaeological perspective on health and living conditions in Upper Nubia in the late 2nd and early 1st millennium BC

Michaela Binder; Charlotte Roberts; Neal Spencer


Archive | 2016

The Holocene Geoarchaeology of the Desert Nile in Northern Sudan

Jamie C. Woodward; Mark G. Macklin; Neal Spencer; Derek Welsby; Matthew Dalton; Sophie Hay

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J.C. Woodward

University of Manchester

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Anna Garnett

University College London

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