- Jean MacIntosh Turfa with Marshall J. Becker –
——(1998b) “Etruscan Gold Dental Appliances: Evidence for Cultural Processes” in Treating
Illnesses: Historical Routes, 1st Internatl. Conf. Of Anthropology and History of Health and Disease,
Vol. 2 (ed.), Antonio Guerci. Genoa: Erga edizioni, 10–21. Also issued by Erga multimedia as,
“Guarire ieri e oggi. Domani?/Healing, Yesterday and Today. Tomorrow?”
——(1999a) “Etruscan Gold Dental Appliances: Three Newly ‘Discovered’ Examples in America,”
American Journal of Archaeology 103: 103–111.
——(1999b) “The Valsiarosa Gold Dental Appliance: Etruscan Origins for Dental Prostheses,”
Etruscan Studies 6: 43–73.
——(1999c) “Calculating stature from in situ measurements of skeletons and from long bone
lengths: an historical perspective leading to a test of Formicola’s hypothesis at 5th century bce
Satricum, Lazio, Italy,” Rivista di Antropologia (Rome) 77: 225–247.
——(1999d) “Ancient ‘Dental Implants:’ A Recently Proposed Example from France Evaluated
with other Claims,” International Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Implants 14: 19–29.
——(2002a) “Etruscan female tooth evulsion: gold dental appliances as ornaments” in G. Carr
and P. Baker (eds), Practices, Practitioners and Patients: New approaches to medical archaeology and
anthropology. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 236–257.
——(2002b) “Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa: A Re-Evaluation of her Skeleton in the British Museum”
in Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa: The Story of an Etruscan Noblewoman, J. Swaddling and J. Prag (eds),
The British Museum Occasional Paper Number 100. London: The Trustees of the British
Museum, 17–69.
——(2002c) “Etruscan Tombs at Tarquinia: Heterarchy as Indicated by Human Skeletal Remains”
in Paesaggi d’Acque – Ricerche a Scavi. Preistoria e Protostoria in Etruria: Atti del Quinto Encontro di
Studi (12–14 May 2000), Vol. II (ed.), N. Negroni Catacchio. Milano: Onlus, for the Centro
Studi di Preistoria e Archeologia, 687–708.
——(2003) “Etruscan Gold Dental Appliances: Evidence for Early ‘Parting’ of Gold in Italy
through the Study of Ancient Pontics” in G. Tsoucaris and J. Lipkowski (eds), Molecular and
Structural Archaeology: Cosmetic and Therapeutic Chemicals, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic (NATO
Science Series, 117), 11–27.
——(2005) “Etruscan Women at Tarquinia: Skeletal Evidence for Tomb Use,” Analecta Romana
Instituti Danici 31: 21–36.
——(2009) “Etruscan Origins of Pharmaceutical Vessel Shapes: Four Apothecary Jars From Early
Chiusi, Toscana, Italy” in S. Bruni (ed.), Etruria e Italia Preromana: Studi in onore di Giovannangelo
Camporeale, Volume I. Pisa: Accademia Editoriale, 69–72.
——(2012) “Coming of Age in Etruria: Etruscan Children’s Cemeteries at Tarquinia, Italy,”
International Journal of Anthropology 27(1–2): 63–86.
Becker, M. J. and Donadio, A. (1992) “A summary of the analysis of cremated human skeletal
remains from the Greek colony of Pithekoussai at Lacco Ameno, Ischia, Italy,” Old World
Archaeology Newsletter 16(1): 15–23.
Becker, M. J. and Salvadei, L. (1992) “Analysis of the Human Skeletal Remains from the Cemetery
of Osteria dell’Osa” in A. M. Bietti Sestieri (ed.), La Necropoli Laziale di Osteria dell’Osa. Rome:
Quasar, 53–191.
Becker, M. J. and Turfa, J. M. (forthcoming) Etruscan Dental Appliances (monograph).
Becker, M. J., Turfa, J. M. and Algee-Hewitt, B. (2009) Human Remains from Etruscan and Italic
Tomb Groups in the University of Pennsylvania Museum (Biblioteca di Studi Etruschi 48), Pisa/
Rome: Fabrizio Serra.
Bertoldi, V. (1936) “Nomina tusca in Dioscoride,” Studi Etruschi 10: 295–320.
Bietti Sestieri, A. M. (1992) The Iron Age Community of Osteria dell’Osa. A study of socio-political
development in central Tyrrhenian Italy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Bliquez, L. (1996) “Prosthetics in Classical Antiquity: Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Prosthetics”
in W. Haase (ed.), Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt, Teil II: Principat, Vol. 37.3: [2640–
2676] 2650–2651 on Etruscan.