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Bioarchaeology has long focused on understanding past human life through skeletal remains, including oral pathology and stable isotope analysis. Despite advancements in statistical analysis, correlations are still largely made manually. To streamline this, we propose a tool to automatically identify correlations between dental pathologies and isotope values. Our work is part of the ongoing APOIKIA project on Corinthian colonisation in 7th century BC. We analyse osteoarchaeological material from the Western Necropolis of Amvrakia, Greece, founded around 640 BC. Our methodology integrates novel data collection approaches and FAIR principles for data longevity and accessibility, utilizing R Markdown documents and cloud webware.
Funding We acknowledge support of this work by the project "ΑΠΟΙΚΙΑ: Ancient DNA analysis in novel multidisciplinary approach of ancient Corinthian colonization. Ancient Amvrakia and Ancient Tenea as demonstration examples." (MIS 5056266) which is implemented under the Special Action "Open Innovation In Culture" funded by the Operational Programme "Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship and Innovation 2014-2020 (EPAnEK)" implemented under Regional Operational Programs of the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (NSRF 2014-2020) and co-financed by Greece and the European Union (European Regional Development Fund).
databases, colonisation, osteoarchaeology, paleodemography, paleopathology, isotope, database architecture, Amvrakia, ancient Greece, methodology
databases, colonisation, osteoarchaeology, paleodemography, paleopathology, isotope, database architecture, Amvrakia, ancient Greece, methodology
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