| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6554750 | International Journal of Paleopathology | 2018 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Archaeozoology provides bones, which quite regularly present traces of fractures. These fractures are more or less at an advanced level of healing and bear witness to traumas or pathologies. These cases of palaeopathology are not always the subject of publications, which further restricts our knowledge about them. This short note allows the scientific community to be aware of an original case from an archaeological context in Jordan of a fracture on a hen's femur, consolidated by a callus and with displacement of the distal ends. Beyond the "anecdotal" aspect, and without imagining the circumstances in which the fracture occurred, the animal survived.
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Authors
Aurélia Borvon, Claude Guintard, Hervé Monchot,
