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Are you not entertained? New analysis from the bones of an ancient gladiator discovered in York suggests that British fighters may have been attacked by ferocious big cats during arena battles ...
Undated handout photo issued by Durham University of bite marks from a large cat found on the left iliac spine of a Roman-era skeleton in York (Durham University/PA) More research will follow into ...
Could these be evidence of gladiatorial combat with large animals? Lesions on the left iliac spine of 6DT19. Lesion on the right ilium of 6DT19. This raises its own question – how do you prove ...
Lesion on the left iliac spine of 6DT19. The new finding not only offers fascinating clues into the culture of gladiatorial combat but also highlights the astonishingly far-reaching influence of ...
Lesions on the left iliac spine of the mauled gladiator. Credit: Maynooth University. Eboracum — modern-day York — was no ordinary town. By the third century CE, it was a key military and ...
Various techniques have been proposed for the anterior approach to the upper and lower cervical spine. These have included the transoral approach to the atlas and axis, [1,2] the mandible and ...