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Featured researches published by Vesna Dimitrijević.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2016

Cannibalism versus funerary defleshing and disarticulation after a period of decay: comparisons of bone modifications from four prehistoric sites.

Silvia M. Bello; Rosalind Wallduck; Vesna Dimitrijević; Ivana Živaljević; Chris Stringer

OBJECTIVES Humanly induced modifications on human and non-human bones from four archaeological sites of known funerary rituals (one interpreted as cannibalism and three interpreted as funerary defleshing and disarticulation after a period of decay) were analyzed to ascertain whether macromorphological and micromorphological characteristics of cut marks can be used to distinguish cannibalistic from secondary burial practices. MATERIAL AND METHODS Four collections were analyzed: the Magdalenian assemblage from Goughs Cave (UK) and the Mesolithic-Neolithic bone samples from Lepenski Vir, Padina and Vlasac (Serbia). A total of 647 cut marks (345 on human and 302 on non-human remains) were imaged and measured using an optical surface measurement system, the Alicona InfiniteFocus, housed at the Natural History Museum (London, UK). RESULTS The frequency of cut marks at Goughs Cave exceeds 65%, while it is below 1% in the Serbian sites, and no human tooth marks and only one case of percussion damage have been observed on the three Serbian collections. The distribution of cut marks on human bones is comparable in the four assemblages. Cannibalized human remains, however, present a uniform cut mark distribution, which can be associated with disarticulation of persistent and labile articulations, and the scalping and filleting of muscles. For secondary burials where modification occurred after a period of decay, disarticulation marks are less common and the disarticulation of labile joints is rare. The micromorphometric analyses of cut marks on human and non-human remains suggest that cut marks produced when cleaning partially decayed bodies are significantly different from cut marks produced during butchery of fresh bodies. CONCLUSIONS A distinction between cannibalism and secondary treatment of human bodies can be made based on frequency, distribution and micromorphometric characteristics of cut marks.


Human Evolution | 2001

A human mandible from the loess in the vicinity of Belgrade (Yugoslavia)

Mirjana Roksandic; Vesna Dimitrijević

Human remains of Pleistocene age are rare in Central Balkan, although there is ample evidence of the region being inhabited in the Palaeolithic. Recent re-evaluation and cataloguing of osteological material at the Institute of Regional Geology and Palaeontology (Faculty of Mining and Geology) in Belgrade, has brought to light an undescribed human mandible. The specimen was found by Professor Laskarev loess deposits in Belgrade vicinity. In view of the rarity of human remains from the period in the region, a detailed description, together with taxonomic determination is offered.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2011

A human mandible (BH-1) from the Pleistocene deposits of Mala Balanica cave (Sićevo Gorge, Niš, Serbia).

Mirjana Roksandic; Dušan Mihailović; Norbert Mercier; Vesna Dimitrijević; Mike W. Morley; Zoran Rakocevic; Bojana Mihailović; Pierre Guibert; Jeff Babb


Documenta Praehistorica | 2007

When did the ‘Neolithic package’ reach Lepenski Vir? Radiometric and faunal evidence

Dusan Boric; Vesna Dimitrijević


Quaternary International | 2012

A skeleton of ‘steppe’ mammoth (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) from Drmno, near Kostolac, Serbia

Adrian M. Lister; Vesna Dimitrijević; Zoran Marković; Slobodan Knežević; Dick Mol


Documenta Praehistorica | 2008

Vlasac revisited: formation processes, stratigraphy and dating

Dusan Boric; Charles French; Vesna Dimitrijević


Radiocarbon | 2015

New AMS 14C Dates for Human Remains from Stone Age Sites in the Iron Gates Reach of the Danube, Southeast Europe

Clive Bonsall; Rastko Vasić; Adina Boroneanț; Mirjana Roksandic; Andrei Soficaru; Kathleen McSweeney; Anna Evatt; Ülle Aguraiuja; Catriona Pickard; Vesna Dimitrijević; Thomas Higham; Derek Hamilton; Gordon Cook


Starinar | 2007

Absolute chronology and stratigraphy of Lepenski Vir

Dusan Boric; Vesna Dimitrijević


Antiquity | 2012

Early Modern human settling of the Danube corridor: the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic site of Tabula Traiana Cave in the Danube Gorges (Serbia)

Dusan Boric; Vesna Dimitrijević; Dustin White; Christine S. Lane; Charly A. I. French; Emanuela Cristiani


Documenta Praehistorica | 2006

Spondylus and Glycymeris bracelets: trade reflections at Neolithic Vinča-Belo Brdo

Vesna Dimitrijević; Boban Tripković

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Dragana Filipović

Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

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Miomir Korać

Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

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Nemanja Mrdjić

Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

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Mladen Jovičić

Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

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S. Vuković

University of Belgrade

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