1. Bioarchaeology and Osteobiography 2. Bones and Teeth: Anatomy, Genomics, and Stable Isotopes 3. European-Origin and Recent Remain Burial Models 4. Discovery and Excavation 5. Observation and Disposition 6. North American Indigenous Community Burial Models 7. Overview: Biological and Anthropological Background 8. Bone Pathology and Early Ancient DNA Studies of Tuberculosis in North America, Pre-European Settlement 9. Repatriation of Canadian First Nation Remains and Collaborative Research 10. African Indigenous Burials 11. Case Study on the People of Lake Turkana, Kenya (5,000 Years) 12. South African Coastal Foragers: Linking Osteobiography to History, Ethnography, Bioarchaeology, and Genomics 13. Skeletal Evidence of Interpersonal Violence, Population Growth, and Climate Change 14. International Repatriation: Reclaiming "Race Science" Skeletal Exports from Europe to Africa 15. Conclusion: Biological and Archaeological Importance
Dr. Susan K. Pfeiffer is a Professor Emerita in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto. She received her Ph.D. at the University of Toronto, developing her thesis on the skeletal biology of archaic populations of the Great Lakes Region. Dr. Pfeiffer is also a Research Professor at the Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology at George Washington University, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and part of the Community of Experts for the European Science Foundation. She has published numerous book chapters and journal articles on skeletal biology, evolution, histology, and human remain archaeology.