American Journal of Physical Anthropology

The results have important implications for the evolution of pelvic anatomy, and sexual dimorphism, but also highlight the plasticity inherent in pelvic morphology. Analyzing pelvis features separately in a clearly defined, relatively genetically homogenous population gives insight into the determinants of bone morphology, which are not readily observable by other means. The relationship between …

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

The injuries, manner of disposal of the bodies, radiocarbon dates, and other available data strongly suggest that the Potočani sample represents a single episode of execution during which the Potočani people were unable to defend themselves. The Potočani massacre is the oldest such example in southeastern Europe and provides additional evidence that indiscriminate violence on a massive scale is n…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

The factors associated with PH may be related to influences on decisions to migrate and diversity among migrant sending regions. The skeletal evidence for early life stress is generally consistent with common public health concerns among impoverished communities in the region. The lesions themselves are viewed as embodied risk of physiological disturbance when resource access is structured by hig…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

The Arothron R package is designed to study digital models of fossil specimens. By using Arothron, scientists can handle digital models with ease, investigate the inner morphology of 3D skeletal models, gain a full representation of the original shapes of damaged specimens, and compare shapes across specimens.

AnthropologyPleistocene-Era Hominins and ArchaeologySocial Sciences

Efforts to name and classify Middle Pleistocene Homo, often referred to as "Homo heidelbergensis" are hampered by confusing patterns of morphology but also by conflicting paleoanthropological ideologies that are embedded in approaches to hominin taxonomy, nomenclature, and the species concept. We deconstruct these issues to show how the field's search for a "real" species relies on strict adheren…

AnthropologyPleistocene-Era Hominins and ArchaeologySocial Sciences

The results support that these coastal populations were low-mobility groups. Although interactions between individuals of different regions likely existed, gene flow occurred mostly among individuals from local or adjacent areas. The introduction of ceramic in the South Coast is not associated with changes in dental morphology patterns, suggesting its adoption is not exclusively associated with t…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

A local origin for the leprosy patients is in line with historical evidence, unlike the small dietary contribution of marine protein. Although only 10% of the analyzed individuals have rib/long bone offsets that undoubtedly show a dietary shift, the data appear to reveal a pattern for 25 individuals (out of 50), with elevated δ<sup>13</sup> C and/or δ<sup>15</sup> N values in the ribs compared to…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesPaleopathology and ancient diseasesSocial Sciences

This study provides evidence for familial risk of LEH (genetic and environmental) that has consequences for the broad use of this skeletal marker of stress. These results have repercussions for archaeological assemblages, or population health studies, where genetic relatives and household groups might be heavily represented.

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

Results provide compelling evidence of increasing physiological stress and mortality in the Nasca highlands during the LIP, but also reveal substantial heterogeneity in frailty and the risk of death. Certain members of society experienced a heavier disease burden and higher mortality compared to their contemporaries. Elevated levels of disease and lethal trauma among females account for some of t…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

Our study demonstrated the potential of machine learning approaches, such as neural networks, for multivariate analyses. Using these statistical methods improves the rate of correct sex estimations in calcined human remains and can be applied to highly fragmented unburnt individuals from both archaeological and forensic contexts.

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

These findings further support that TA accuracy depends on the prior distribution used and, in the Hamann-Todd Collection, the accuracy for white individuals is more influenced by this limitation than when black individuals are analyzed.

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

Urbanization is one of the most important settlement shifts in human history and has been the focus of research within bioarchaeology for decades. However, there have been limited attempts to synthesize the results of these studies in order to gain a broader perspective on whether or how urbanization affects the biology, demography, and behavior of humans, and how these potential effects are embo…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

Population affinity estimations can aid migrant identification, and current reference data used in forensic anthropological practice should be replaced with data from positive identifications. Estimates of geographic origin may be more useful than the broad generic term Hispanic for narrowing down the search for a missing person, but more data and research is needed to achieve this goal. Although…

ArchaeologyArcheologyArts and HumanitiesBiologyCountry of origin

Our analyses contribute to a better understanding of the demographic history of O1a-M119 sub-lineages over the past 10,000 years during the emergence of Han, Austronesians, Tai-Kadai-speaking populations. The data described in this study will assist in understanding of the history of Han, Tai-Kadai-speaking, and Austronesian-speaking populations from ethnology, archeology, and linguistic perspect…

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyForensic and Genetic ResearchGeneticsLife Sciences

These results suggest increased mortality risk for those with lesions indicative of anemia (CO), and selective mortality of younger individuals during the medieval period. Despite sex-specific nutritional and occupational hazards, and status-based access to resources, the prevalence of CO was similar across sex and status, which suggests living with parasitic infection that caused anemia was an e…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesPaleopathology and ancient diseasesSocial Sciences

Sufficient peptide material to determine sex can be recovered even from the crowns of developing perinatal teeth that are not fully mineralized. The minimally destructive and inexpensive (compared to ancient DNA) nature of this procedure has significant implications for bioarchaeological studies of infancy and childhood.

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences
Paper
Elizabeth A. DiGangi·Jonathan D. Bethard
1/18/2021

Since the professionalization of US-based forensic anthropology in the 1970s, ancestry estimation has been included as a standard part of the biological profile, because practitioners have assumed it necessary to achieve identifications in medicolegal contexts. Simultaneously, forensic anthropologists have not fully considered the racist context of the criminal justice system in the United States…

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyGeneticsLife SciencesRace, Genetics, and Society
Paper
Madeleine Mant·...·Carlina de la Cova
1/11/2021

Intersectionality, the theory named by Kimberlé Crenshaw, outlines how multiple elements of an individual's social identity overlap to create and preserve societal inequalities and discrimination. Recently bioarchaeology's engagement with intersectionality has become increasingly explicit, as the field recognizes the lived experience of multiple axes of an individual's identity. Evidence of traum…

ArcheologyArts and HumanitiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesSocial Sciences

Abstract Objectives Three‐dimensional (3D) data collected by structured light scanners, photogrammetry, and computed tomography (CT) scans are increasingly combined in joint analyses, even though the scanning techniques and reconstruction software differ considerably. The aim of the present study was to compare the quality and accuracy of surface models and landmark data obtained from modern clin…

Geometry and TopologyMathematicsMorphological variations and asymmetryPhysical Sciences
research.ioresearch.io

Sign up to keep scrolling

Create your feed subscriptions, save articles, keep scrolling.

Already have an account?