“…Large‐scale broken and commingled skeletal depositions have garnered considerable scholarship on refining methods for assessing minimum number of individuals (MNI) (Adams & Byrd, ; Adams & Konigsberg, ; Lambacher, Gerdau‐Radonic, Bonthorne, & Valle de Tarazaga Montero, ; Osterholtz, Baustian, & Martin, ), age‐at‐death and sex estimates (Brickley, Dragomir, & Lockau, ; Hoppa & Gruspier, ; Schaefer & Black, ), taphonomy (Mollerup, Tjellden, Hertz, & Holst, ) and funerary ritual (Moutafi & Voutsaki, ; Robb, ). There is limited research concerning the health, behavior and lifestyle experienced by these communities, who by nature of the funerary program preference, have been excluded from bioarchaeological and paleopathological research.…”