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Dive into the research topics where Sandra Wheeler is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandra Wheeler.


International Journal of Paleopathology | 2013

Shattered lives and broken childhoods: Evidence of physical child abuse in ancient Egypt

Sandra Wheeler; Lana Williams; Patrick Beauchesne; Tosha Dupras

Much can be learned about cultural attitudes of violence towards children from the analyses of their skeletal remains and mortuary patterns of the communities in which they lived and died. A bioarchaeological approach integrating biological, socio-cultural, and physical environments is used in analyzing the remains of a 2-3-year-old child from Kellis 2, a Romano-Christian period cemetery in the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt. The skeletal remains of this individual show an unusual pattern of trauma and healing events, possibly indicating multiple episodes of non-accidental trauma. Macroscopic, radiographic, and histologic analyses show the extent of the skeletal trauma and healing, while stable carbon and nitrogen analyses of bone and hair reveal metabolic disturbances and changes in diet correlated with these traumatic events. Results from the differential diagnosis demonstrate that this individual exhibits skeletal fracture and healing patterns consistent with repeated non-accidental trauma, which may or may not have resulted in death. In addition, this individual may also represent the earliest documented case of violence against children from an archaeological context.


Archive | 2011

Forensic Recovery of Human Remains: Archaeological Approaches, Second Edition

Tosha Dupras; John Schultz; Sandra Wheeler; Lana Williams

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American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2014

An exploration of adult body shape and limb proportions at Kellis 2, Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt

Michele M. Bleuze; Sandra Wheeler; Tosha Dupras; Lana Williams; J. El Molto

Several studies have shown that the human body generally conforms to the ecogeographical expectations of Bergmanns and Allens rules; however, recent evidence suggests that these expectations may not hold completely for some populations. Egypt is located at the crossroads of Sub-Saharan Africa, Southern Europe, and the Near East, and gene flow among groups in these regions may confound ecogeographical patterning. In this study, we test the fit of the adult physique of a large sample (N = 163) of females and males from the Kellis 2 cemetery (Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt) against ecogeographical predictions. Body shape (i.e., body mass relative to stature) was assessed by the femur head diameter to bicondylar femur length index (FHD/BFL), and brachial and crural indices were calculated to examine intralimb proportions. Body shape in the Kellis 2 sample is not significantly different from high-latitude groups and a Lower Nubian sample, and intralimb proportions are not significantly different from mid-latitude and other low-latitude groups. This study demonstrates the potential uniqueness of body shape and intralimb proportions in an ancient Egyptian sample, and further highlights the complex relationship between ecogeographic patterning and adaptation.


American Antiquity | 2014

Death and Disability in a Younge Phase Community

Michael W. Spence; Lana Williams; Sandra Wheeler

Abstract Roffelsen is an early Younge phase mortuary component in southwestern Ontario. The single burial feature is a pit containing the articulated skeletons of seven successively buried individuals, ranging in age from a few months to late middle age. All had been stripped of soft tissues, except for the connecting tissues that maintained their articulation. Most also had a disk cut from the cranium and a hole drilled near bregma. All but the infant display various forms of developmental failure of the outer and middle ear and the petrous portion of the temporal bone. The pit was apparently the burial facility for an extended family with significant hearing impairments. This disability may have limited their interaction with neighboring communities, perhaps even playing a role in their eventual disappearance as a separate community.


American Journal of Human Biology | 2016

Growth of the pectoral girdle in a sample of juveniles from the kellis 2 cemetery, Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt

Michele M. Bleuze; Sandra Wheeler; Lana Williams; Tosha Dupras

This study investigates growth patterns in the scapula and clavicle in a cross‐sectional juvenile skeletal sample ranging from 20 weeks gestation to 8.5 years of age from the Kellis 2 cemetery, Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt. The primary goal is to quantify growth patterns and growth velocities in the scapula and clavicle to better understand the development of the pectoral girdle.


American Journal of Human Biology | 2014

Ontogenetic changes in intralimb proportions in a Romano-Christian period sample from the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt

Michele M. Bleuze; Sandra Wheeler; Lana Williams; Tosha Dupras

The purpose of this study is to document the appearance of adult patterns in intralimb indices during ontogeny in a skeletal sample from the Kellis 2 cemetery, Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt. In addition, this study explores evolvability in intralimb indices to understand relative differences in sensitivity to ecogeographic variables.


Archive | 2005

Forensic Recovery of Human Remains: Archaeological Approaches

John Schultz; Lana Williams; Sandra Wheeler; Tosha Dupras


International Journal of Osteoarchaeology | 2012

Nutritional and disease stress of juveniles from the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt

Sandra Wheeler


Archive | 2005

Osteology of Infants and Children

Brenda J. Baker; Tosha Dupras; Matthew W. Tocheri; Sandra Wheeler


The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018

Entering the "Valley of Death": Isotopic Evidence of Vulnerable Survivors at Roman Period Kellis, Egypt

Sandra Wheeler; Lana Williams; Tosha Dupras

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Lana Williams

University of Central Florida

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Tosha Dupras

University of Central Florida

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John Schultz

University of Central Florida

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Michele M. Bleuze

State University of New York System

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Courtney D. Eleazer

Florida International University

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J. El Molto

University of Western Ontario

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