Jennifer Hildebrand - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Address: Reno Nevdada, United States

less

Uploads

Papers by Jennifer Hildebrand

Research paper thumbnail of Social Bioarchaeology of Childhood Applied to the Analysis of an Excavated 19th Century Mennonite Cemetery

Society for Historical Archaeology, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Children in Archaeological Lithic Analysis

One assumption that persists in the field of archaeology is that it is easier to observe children... more One assumption that persists in the field of archaeology is that it is easier to observe children within historic sites through toys or burials than it is to observe children within a prehistoric setting through lithic production. The purpose of this paper is to examine the current position of children within the prehistoric archaeological literature and to provide case studies of research that focus specifically on how children can be observed within lithic analysis.

Research paper thumbnail of The Social Bioarchaeology of Childhood as Applied to the Analysis of an Excavated Mid- to Late-Nineteenth-Century Mennonite Cemetery, Berne, Indiana

Research paper thumbnail of Social Bioarchaeology of Childhood Applied to the Analysis of an Excavated 19th Century Mennonite Cemetery

Society for Historical Archaeology, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Children in Archaeological Lithic Analysis

One assumption that persists in the field of archaeology is that it is easier to observe children... more One assumption that persists in the field of archaeology is that it is easier to observe children within historic sites through toys or burials than it is to observe children within a prehistoric setting through lithic production. The purpose of this paper is to examine the current position of children within the prehistoric archaeological literature and to provide case studies of research that focus specifically on how children can be observed within lithic analysis.

Research paper thumbnail of The Social Bioarchaeology of Childhood as Applied to the Analysis of an Excavated Mid- to Late-Nineteenth-Century Mennonite Cemetery, Berne, Indiana

Log In