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My patients were mummies / Michael R. Zimmerman.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Zimmerman, Michael R., author.
Series:
Focus on civilizations and cultures.
Focus on Civilizations and Cultures
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Mummies.
Paleopathology.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (241 pages).
Place of Publication:
New York : Nova Science Publishers, 2017.
Summary:
Michael R. Zimmerman, MD, PhD is an anthropologist and retired pathologist. He obtained his medical degree and training in pathology from New York University as well as a degree in anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania. He has combined a full career in academic medicine with research in paleopathology, the study of diseases found through the examination of mummies and ancient skeletal human and prehuman remains. Recognized as one of the world's experts in this field, he is currently Adjunct Professor of Biology at Villanova University, Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania and Visiting Professor in the UK at the University of Manchester's KNH Centre for Biomedical Egyptology. He teaches courses in paleopathology, history of disease, medical anthropology and forensic anthropology. His studies have involved working with three archeologic expeditions in Egypt, where he examined mummies in the area of Luxor and the Dakhleh Oasis in the Western Desert. He has also examined a number of frozen mummies in Alaska as well as mummies from the Penn Museum and the Royal Ontario Museum. He has served as a consultant on the find of the Iceman, for the National Archives and Records Administration Special Access and Freedom of Information Act Unit, College Park, MD, President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Review Board, and the National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA, Office of Polar Programs. He has been invited to lectures at many museums, among them the British Museum, the Manchester Museum, Penn Museum, the University of Zurich's Institute of Evolutionary Medicine and the Institute for Mummies and the Iceman. His recent publications include: "Cancer: A New Disease, an Old Disease, or Something in Between?" in Nature Reviews Cancer; "Studying Mummies: Giving Life to a Dry Subject," in Palaeopathology in Egypt and Nubia: A Century in Review; and "PUM I Revisited: Tradeoffs in Preservation and Discovery," in The Anatomical Record. My Patients Were Mummies follows the many adventures of a career that took him to exotic parts of the world and has contributed to our understanding of the role that the evolution of diseases has had in human biological and cultural history.
Contents:
Why and how do we examine mummies?
The history of mummy paleopathology
An Aleut mummy comes to Washington
The doctor becomes a grad student
Experimental mummification
Egyptian mummies in museums
The Dahkleh Oasis project
An Egyptian mummy is made in Baltimore
Practicing medicine in ancient Egypt
My oldest patients
Two mummies are admitted to Harvard
The St. Lawrence Island Iniut mummy
The frozen family of Barrow, Alaska
Agniayaaq : a prehistoric eskimo child in Alaska
Paleopathology and human evolution
Curios, African art and paleopathology
Helmsman's elbow : an occupational disease of the 17th century
The Salem witch trials : Joan of Arc and ergotism
20th century paleopathology : a train robber and a president
The Manchester mummy project
Antarctica's frozen seal mummies and the spread of tuberculosis.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
1-5361-1874-5

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