Clay-shoveler's fracture: an uncommon diagnosis in palaeopathology

An archaeological case of clay‐shoveler's fracture was observed in an adult male exhumed from a Roman necropolis dated to the 1st–3rd century AD and located in the city of Barcelona, Spain. Clay‐shoveler's fracture is a breakage of a lower cervical or upper thoracic spinous process as a re...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of osteoarchaeology 2006-07, Vol.16 (4), p.366-372
Hauptverfasser: Jordana, X., Galtés, I., Busquets, F., Isidro, A., Malgosa, A.
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container_issue 4
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container_title International journal of osteoarchaeology
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creator Jordana, X.
Galtés, I.
Busquets, F.
Isidro, A.
Malgosa, A.
description An archaeological case of clay‐shoveler's fracture was observed in an adult male exhumed from a Roman necropolis dated to the 1st–3rd century AD and located in the city of Barcelona, Spain. Clay‐shoveler's fracture is a breakage of a lower cervical or upper thoracic spinous process as a result of mechanical stress. Different mechanisms have been related to this injury, generally in labour‐related contexts. This paper reviews the literature concerning this uncommon finding, focusing especially on its mechanism and on activity‐related lesions. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/oa.829
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Clay‐shoveler's fracture is a breakage of a lower cervical or upper thoracic spinous process as a result of mechanical stress. Different mechanisms have been related to this injury, generally in labour‐related contexts. This paper reviews the literature concerning this uncommon finding, focusing especially on its mechanism and on activity‐related lesions. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Archaeology
Fractures
Human remains
Occupational accidents
occupational injury
palaeopathology
Roman civilization
Roman Imperial Age
Skeletal system
spinous process
stress fracture
thoracic vertebrae
vertebral trauma
title Clay-shoveler's fracture: an uncommon diagnosis in palaeopathology
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