ISSN: 1047-482X
Journal Home
Journal Guideline
International Journal of Osteoarchaeology Q1 Unclaimed
International Journal of Osteoarchaeology is a journal indexed in SJR in Archeology (arts and humanities) and Anthropology with an H index of 70. It has a price of 2500 €. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,565 and it has a best quartile of Q1. It is published in English. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,565.
Type: Journal
Type of Copyright:
Languages: English
Open Access Policy: Open Choice
Type of publications:
Publication frecuency: -
2500 €
Inmediate OANPD
Embargoed OA0 €
Non OAMetrics
0,565
SJR Impact factor70
H Index100
Total Docs (Last Year)315
Total Docs (3 years)5689
Total Refs430
Total Cites (3 years)307
Citable Docs (3 years)1.32
Cites/Doc (2 years)56.89
Ref/DocOther journals with similar parameters
Radiocarbon Q1
Journal of Archaeological Research Q1
Journal of World Prehistory Q1
Quaternary Science Reviews Q1
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory Q1
Compare this journals
Aims and Scope
Best articles by citations
Dental health of Vikings from Kopparsvik on Gotland
View moreMarked occupational dental abrasion from medieval Kent
View moreCongenital absence of the patella in an Anglo-Saxon skeleton
View moreThe spitalfields project, vol. 2, the anthropology: The middling sort. By Theya Molleson and Margaret Cox with H. A. Waldron and D. K. Whittaker. CBA Research Report 86, Council for British Archaeology, 1993. ISBN 1-872414-08-7. Price £24
View moreEvidence of hawking (falconry) from bird and mammal bones
View morePreservation of bird bones: erosion versus digestion by owls
View moreBan Chiang, a prehistoric village site in northeast Thailand, volume 1: the human skeletal remains
View morePalaeodemography: age distributions from skeletal samples Edited by Robert D. Hoppa and James W. Vaupel, Cambridge University Press, 2002. xiii +259 pp. ISBN 0 521 80063 3 (hardback).
View moreApproaching ancient disease from a
View morePalaeodiet reconstruction inferred by stable isotopes analysis of faunal and human remains at Bronze Age Punta di Zambrone (Calabria, Italy)
View moreEat what is there: hunting and gathering in the world of Neanderthals and their neighbours
View moreHuman Biologists in the Archives. D. Ann Herring & Alan C. Swedlund (eds). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2003. 341pp ISBN 0521801044
View moreEnamel hypoplasia and health conditions through social status in the Roman Imperial Age (First to third centuries, Rome, Italy)
View moreDNA ofMycobacterium leprae detected by PCR in ancient bone
View moreA bioarchaeological study of plastered skulls from Anatolia: new discoveries and interpretations
View moreEvidence of interpersonal violence at the Chalcolithic village of Shiqmim (Israel)
View moreSurvival of a multiple skull trauma: the case of an early neolithic individual from the LBK enclosure at Herxheim (Southwest Germany)
View moreVanishing carnivores: what can the disappearance of large carnivores tell us about the Neanderthal world?
View moreBirds and Archaeology: New Research
View moreSeptic bone changes in leprosy: A clinical, radiological and palaeopathological review
View moreHealth and safety issues in the Victorian workplace: An example of mandibular phosphorus necrosis from Gloucester, UK
View moreCaprine mortality profiles from prehistoric cave-sites of the northern Adriatic: Livestock strategies or natural death?
View moreThe person-years construct: ageing and the prevalence of health related phenomena from skeletal samples
View moreThe past and the present of leprosy, archaeological, historical, palaeopathological and clinical approaches
View more
Comments