Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity

Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Abstract: Rangifer tarandus, the species which encompasses both caribou in North America and reindeer in Eurasia, is a keystone species for both the cultures and the ecosystems of the circumpolar world. Because of this, human interactions with reindeer and caribou throug...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hull, Emily
Other Authors: Losey, Robert (Anthropology)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta. Department of Anthropology. 2020
Subjects:
art
Online Access:https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/85827d53-aab7-4c1b-b795-7f2b09934890
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.sd0v3v 2023-05-15T15:53:27+02:00 Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity Hull, Emily Losey, Robert (Anthropology) 2020-07-09 https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/85827d53-aab7-4c1b-b795-7f2b09934890 en eng University of Alberta. Department of Anthropology. 10670/1.sd0v3v https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/85827d53-aab7-4c1b-b795-7f2b09934890 other ERA : Education and Research Archive phil art Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2020 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:22:04Z Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Abstract: Rangifer tarandus, the species which encompasses both caribou in North America and reindeer in Eurasia, is a keystone species for both the cultures and the ecosystems of the circumpolar world. Because of this, human interactions with reindeer and caribou throughout history are of great interest to zooarchaeologists. Beyond the human-focused exploration of these relationships, these studies attempt to understand the experiences of the reindeer as well. This dissertation undertakes to explore, both quantitatively and qualitatively, the anatomy and life experiences of these animals. The studies include, first, a study of diagnostic differences between the phalanges of the fore and hindlimb, second, a study of the soft tissues of the hoof, third, an analysis of potential difference in entheseal changes between populations, fourth, a study of incidences of pathology between populations and sexes, and lastly, an osteobiography of a single remarkable animal. These studies highlight the use of osteology, anatomy, and paleopathology to explore animal life histories and create animal osteobiographies. As such, they present a collection of foundational studies designed for use by zooarchaeologists working with reindeer and caribou and for human-animal scholars examining the relationships between humans and Rangifer tarandus. Thesis caribou Rangifer tarandus Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic phil
art
spellingShingle phil
art
Hull, Emily
Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity
topic_facet phil
art
description Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Abstract: Rangifer tarandus, the species which encompasses both caribou in North America and reindeer in Eurasia, is a keystone species for both the cultures and the ecosystems of the circumpolar world. Because of this, human interactions with reindeer and caribou throughout history are of great interest to zooarchaeologists. Beyond the human-focused exploration of these relationships, these studies attempt to understand the experiences of the reindeer as well. This dissertation undertakes to explore, both quantitatively and qualitatively, the anatomy and life experiences of these animals. The studies include, first, a study of diagnostic differences between the phalanges of the fore and hindlimb, second, a study of the soft tissues of the hoof, third, an analysis of potential difference in entheseal changes between populations, fourth, a study of incidences of pathology between populations and sexes, and lastly, an osteobiography of a single remarkable animal. These studies highlight the use of osteology, anatomy, and paleopathology to explore animal life histories and create animal osteobiographies. As such, they present a collection of foundational studies designed for use by zooarchaeologists working with reindeer and caribou and for human-animal scholars examining the relationships between humans and Rangifer tarandus.
author2 Losey, Robert (Anthropology)
format Thesis
author Hull, Emily
author_facet Hull, Emily
author_sort Hull, Emily
title Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity
title_short Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity
title_full Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity
title_fullStr Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity
title_full_unstemmed Let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: Rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity
title_sort let the winter sun shine on, let me feel the frost of dawn: rangifer tarandus osteology, anatomy, and identity
publisher University of Alberta. Department of Anthropology.
publishDate 2020
url https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/85827d53-aab7-4c1b-b795-7f2b09934890
genre caribou
Rangifer tarandus
genre_facet caribou
Rangifer tarandus
op_source ERA : Education and Research Archive
op_relation 10670/1.sd0v3v
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/85827d53-aab7-4c1b-b795-7f2b09934890
op_rights other
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