Search:

search tips 

© Center for a Public Anthropology,
Robert Borofsky (2002)
All Rights Reserved

 

The Raw, Unedited LexisNexis Data That
Were Used to Compile
the List of Citations Referred to Here

Return to Main Page

David Anderson

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, November 14, 2005 Monday, Home Edition, NEWS; Pg. 9A, 1286 words, Southern archaeologists revise history; Excavations suggest new human timeline in U.S., MIKE TONER
2. St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri), March 14, 2005 Monday, FIVE STAR LATE LIFT EDITION, ST. CLAIR-MONROE POST; Pg. 1, 574 words, NEWS BRIEFS
3. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, November 18, 2004 Thursday, Home Edition, Pg. 1A, 794 words, Earliest Americans may predate ice age, MIKE TONER

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. New Scientist, May 22, 1999, Features, Pg. 3838, 2518 words, Born in a storm, Jeff Hecht A climate upheaval some six thousand years ago may have forced people all over the world to adapt simply to survive, writes Jeff Hecht. The payoff was a great leap forward for civilisation

Charles Faulkner

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. Christian Science Monitor (Boston, MA), December 9, 1982, Thursday, Midwestern Edition, Pg. 3, 468 words, A bit of American culture from way back when..., By Peter Grier, Staff correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor, Washington
2. The New York Times, December 9, 1982, Thursday, Late City Final Edition, Section A; Page 18, Column 1; National Desk, 795 words, ANCIENT INDIAN ART FOUND IN TENNESSEE CAVE, By PHILIP M. BOFFEY, Special to the New York Times, WASHINGTON, Dec. 8
3. The Washington Post, December 9, 1982, Thursday, Final Edition, First Section; A1, 806 words, Explorers Find North America's First Cave Art, By Philip J. Hilts, Washington Post Staff Writer

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. Newsweek, December 20, 1982, UNITED STATES EDITION, SCIENCE; Pg. 90, 1326 words, The Original American Way, SHARON BEGLEY


Janice Harper

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Benita Howell

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, July 6, 1993, Tuesday, 1130 words, Mystery of the Melungeons Descendant traces roots of mountain folk, By Chris Wohlwend STAFF WRITER

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Lee Jantz

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Richard Jantz

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN), December 12, 2005 Monday, Metro Edition, NEWS; Pg. 1A, 995 words, Growing field of forensics plants seed for `body farm'; An Iowa professor seeks a federal grant to study the decay of human corpses., Rob Hotakainen, Staff Writer, Washington, D.C.
2. THE DAILY TELEGRAPH(LONDON), May 21, 2005, Saturday, Pg. 015, 622 words, Something is rotting in the state of Tennessee The 'Body Farm' reveals its grisly secrets to Tom Leonard in Knoxville, By TOM LEONARD
3. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania), March 1, 2004 Monday, SOONER EDITION, Pg.A-6, 634 words, EARTH GETS FALSE ALARM ON ASTEROID
4. The Seattle Times, January 4, 2004, Sunday, Fourth Edition, ROP ZONE; News;, Pg. A10, 1247 words, Native remains' return poses painstaking task, Dennis OBrien; The Baltimore Sun, Washington
5. The Toronto Star, December 14, 2003 Sunday, Ontario Edition, SCIENCE; Pg. A16, 1158 words, Body Farm pushes forensic frontiers, Peter Calamai, Toronto Star
6. Plain Dealer (Cleveland, Ohio), October 22, 2003 Wednesday, Final / All, METRO; Pg. B1, 552 words, 'I'm sure it was a homicide,' coroner says; But state of Shakira's body makes it unclear how she died, Lila J. Mills and Amanda Garrett, Plain Dealer Reporters
7. Ottawa Citizen, November 1, 2002 Friday Final Edition, News; Pg. A11, 370 words, Race has major effect on skull shape: study: Findings go against century-old belief, but have no relationship to brain size, researchers insist, Bill Bergstrom, PHILADELPHIA
8. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, February 24, 2002 Sunday,, Home Edition, Pg. 1C, 1104 words, CREMATORY INVESTIGATION: Why didn't Tri-State just cremate the bodies?, MICHAEL PEARSON
9. The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 30, 2001, Sunday, LIFESTYLE;Pg. E-8, 534 words, Today's children only appear to grow taller than their folks, Eric Adler; KNIGHT RIDDER NEWS SERVICE
10. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Wisconsin), September 17, 2001 Monday, FINAL EDITION, Pg. 08A, 1294 words, Many victims likely to be identified; DNA, dental tests assist gruesome task, JOHN FAUBER AND JOE MANNING of the Journal Sentinel staff
11. The Washington Post, June 3, 2001 Sunday, Final Edition, MAGAZINE; Pg. W08, 8233 words, The Body in Question; The discovery of the remains of a 9,000-year-old man on the Columbia River has set off a conflict over race, history and identity that isn't just about the American past, but about the future as well, Steve Coll
12. Columbus Dispatch (Ohio), May 28, 2001, Monday, Pg. 1B, 813 words, INDIANS TALLER, BETTER FED THAN SOLDIERS, DATA SHOWS, David Lore, Dispatch Science Reporter
13. The New York Times, December 3, 2000, Sunday, Late Edition - Final, Section 6; Page 105; Column 3; Magazine Desk , 3294 words, Crime-Scene Forensics; Dead Men Talking, By Lawrence Osborne; Lawrence Osborne is a frequent contributor to the magazine. His last article was about fossil diggers in Morocco. Sally Mann is currently working on a series of photographs about death.
14. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, August 5, 2000, Saturday,, Home Edition, 719 words, Macabre 'farm' helps solve crimes; Scientists learn to collect evidence at a Tennessee facility that studies how bodies decompose., Ken Mink, For the Journal-Constitution
15. The Independent (London), March 10, 2000, Friday, FEATURES; Pg. 8, 1145 words, SCIENCE: ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA; WERE THE EARLIEST INHABITANTS OF THE NEW WORLD FROM SIBERIA, JAPAN - OR STONE AGE SPAIN? THE SCIENTIFIC JURY IS STILL OUT. BY AYALA OCHERT, Ayala Ochert
16. The New York Times, November 9, 1999, Tuesday, Late Edition - Final, Section F; Page 1; Column 1; Science Desk , 2180 words, New Answers to an Old Question: Who Got Here First?, By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD , SANTA FE, N.M.
17. The Washington Post, July 4, 1999, Sunday, Final Edition, WILLIAM BASS, STYLE; Pg. F01, 4484 words, WILLIAM BASS WANTS YOUR BODY; At the world's most macabre research facility, progress is a lot of rot. And death is just the beginning., David Montgomery, Washington Post Staff Writer
18. The Ottawa Citizen, March 17, 1999, FINAL, 994 words, In search of the first Americans: Not when, but how the first humans reached the New World seems to have been brought into question by the 9,000- year-old remains of Spirit Cave Man, which contradict the usual picture of the first settlers, Karen Wright reports., Karen Wright, NEW YORK
19. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, December 2, 1998, Wednesday,, CONSTITUTION EDITION, 675 words, Records suggest remains of Earhart found in 1940, Bill Hendrick
20. The Seattle Times, October 28, 1998, Wednesday, Final Edition, LOCAL NEWS;, Pg. B1, 1215 words, TRIBES TO SING TO KENNEWICK MAN, DIEDTRA HENDERSON; SEATTLE TIMES SCIENCE REPORTER, RICHLAND
21. The Toronto Star, September 21, 1997, Sunday, FINAL EDITION, SCIENCE; Pg. F8, 1172 words, The Kennewick Man crisis Archeologists and Indians clash over a 9,300-year-old skull that could rewrite New World history, BY NICHOLAS GERANIOS ASSOCIATED PRESS, KENNEWICK, Wash.
22. The Toronto Star, September 21, 1997, Sunday, SUNDAY SECOND EDITION, SCIENCE; Pg. F8, 1172 words, The Kennewick Man crisis Archeologists and Indians clash over a 9,300-year-old skull that could rewrite New World history, By Nicholas Geranios ASSOCIATED PRESS, KENNEWICK, Wash.
23. The Denver Post, November 10, 1996 Sunday, 1ST EDITION, Pg. 12, 1632 words, Bodies of Evidence, By Kit Miniclier
Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Washington Post, June 3, 2001 Sunday, Final Edition, MAGAZINE; Pg. W08, 8233 words, The Body in Question; The discovery of the remains of a 9,000-year-old man on the Columbia River has set off a conflict over race, history and identity that isn't just about the American past, but about the future as well, Steve Coll
2. Newsweek, June 7, 1999,, Atlantic Edition, SOCIETY AND THE ARTS; Pg. 56, 2920 words, The First Americans, By Sharon Begley and Andrew Murr
3. New Scientist, October 17, 1998, Features, Pg. 2424, 3188 words, Young Americans, Roger Lewin Europeans may have roamed the New World thousands of years before the Santa Maria made land. Roger Lewin describes a radical rethink of how the Americas were settled


Walter Klippel

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

1. Omaha World Herald (Nebraska), August 5, 2001, Sunday, SUNRISE EDITION, Pg. 6C;, 593 words, Research Gives Angler Record, LARRY PORTER, Lincoln
2. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, October 8, 2000, Sunday,, Home Edition, 520 words, Southern Almanac; CULTURE, NOTES AND NEWS; RARE RHINOS; Tennessee sinkhole yielding fossil treasure that's 4.5 million years old and counting, Staff

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Lyle Konigsberg

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Andrew Kramer

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Michael Logan

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Murray Marks

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Daily Telegraph (Sydney, Australia), March 30, 2005 Wednesday, FEATURES; 7 Days / Seven Days; Pg. T07, 612 words, PREVIEWS, MICHELLE CAZZULINO
2. USA TODAY, June 19, 2003, Thursday,, FINAL EDITION, LIFE;, Pg. 8D, 622 words, Coffin reveals a soldier's story, Dan Vergano, WASHINGTON
3. The Washington Post, May 24, 2002 Friday, Final Edition, A SECTION; Pg. A21, 906 words, Investigators Look for Clues in the Bones; Experts Say Skeleton May Yield Valuable Information a Year After Levy's Death, Debbi Wilgoren, Washington Post Staff Writer
4. The Straits Times (Singapore), April 22, 2001, Sunday, Sunday Plus, Pg. P2, 480 words, Court scenes just like TV's, Will Kern
5. USA TODAY, April 16, 2001, Monday,, FINAL EDITION, LIFE;, Pg. 6D, 1217 words, Strange harvest at the Body Farm Researchers lift clues of death from a field of donated cadavers, Greg Barrett; Gannett News Service, KNOXVILLE, Tenn.
6. The New York Times, December 3, 2000, Sunday, Late Edition - Final, Section 6; Page 105; Column 3; Magazine Desk , 3294 words, Crime-Scene Forensics; Dead Men Talking, By Lawrence Osborne; Lawrence Osborne is a frequent contributor to the magazine. His last article was about fossil diggers in Morocco. Sally Mann is currently working on a series of photographs about death.
7. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, August 5, 2000, Saturday,, Home Edition, 719 words, Macabre 'farm' helps solve crimes; Scientists learn to collect evidence at a Tennessee facility that studies how bodies decompose., Ken Mink, For the Journal-Constitution
8. The Washington Post, July 4, 1999, Sunday, Final Edition, WILLIAM BASS, STYLE; Pg. F01, 4484 words, WILLIAM BASS WANTS YOUR BODY; At the world's most macabre research facility, progress is a lot of rot. And death is just the beginning., David Montgomery, Washington Post Staff Writer

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. New Scientist, September 29, 2001, This Week: This Week - Defeating terror, Pg. 44, 1080 words, The longest search, Diane Martindale (New York) The world's largest forensic investigation has begun in the wake of the terrorist attack on America. It's a search for victims, and a hunt for evidence. But finding the proof required to charge those responsible is a mammoth task. And any retaliatory strikes must hit the right targets. Prosecuting a war on terrorism will not be simple
2. Newsweek, October 23, 2000,, U.S. Edition, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY; Pg. 50, 1280 words, Down on the Body Farm, By Daniel Pedersen
3. Copyright © American Bar Association, 2000., ABA Journal, September, 2000, 86 A.B.A.J. 62, 2789 words, Forensic Law, Down on the Body Farm: A bizarre research facility in Tennessee boasts a bumper crop of corpses--and helps convict killers, Jon Jefferson

Gerald Schroedl

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Jan Simek

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, December 10, 2000, Sunday,, Home Edition, 1598 words, Underground art at risk of overexposure; Prehistoric cave wall drawings dot South, Mike Toner, Staff
2. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania), December 10, 2000, Sunday,, TWO STAR EDITION, Pg. A-12, 1264 words, CAVES PRESERVE ANCIENT INDIAN ART; "UNTIL RECENTLY, NO ONE KNEW ANYTHING LIKE THIS EXISTED IN THE SOUTHEAST.", MIKE TONER, COX NEWS SERVICE, 19TH UNNAMED CAVE, Ala.
Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

Home | To Previous Page | Back to Top