Bilateral palmar prints of 604 male individuals from 12 Iranian groups, six Mongoloid and six Caucasoid, have been analyzed for palmar pattern ridge counts (PPRC). Highly significant variation has been observed in the size of the palmar patterns in all the configurational areas among the Iranian groups. The distance analysis based on PPRCs differentiated the Iranian Mongoloid from the Iranian Caucasoid groups into distinct clusters. The pattern of differentiation based on PPRCs explained the ethnohistoric relationships between the Iranian groups as well as between the Iranian and the 20 Caucasoid groups from India much better than the palmar pattern frequencies. The results of this study demonstrate the existence of variation in the size of...
This study aims to understand the distribution and sexual dimorphism of the a-b ridge count. A cross...
The nature and extent of dermatoglyphic variation in northwest India is examined with the help of 28...
A comparative study of the finger dermatoglyphics of two groups of a Muslim community Punjab. — Ther...
This is the published version, also available at http://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol76/iss2/...
Published data on palmar interdigital ridge counts (a-b, b-c, and c-d) among 57 populations from the...
Palmar dermatoglyphics of a sample including 552 males and 701 females from 8 Basque valleys were an...
Population variation in dermatoglyphic asymmetry and interdigital diversity is studied among 20 Dhan...
<p>The Nilo-Saharan Berta group manifested significantly higher Arches. The two Semitic groups manif...
Dermatoglyphics from two southern Peruvian Indian groups, Nunoa Quechua and Quechua ‘Pooled’, and a ...
Variations in asymmetry and interdigital diversity for the three finger-dermatoglyphic traits, total...
Abstract: The human body is covered with hairs and sebaceous glands except the palmar and plantar re...
Digital and palmar dermatoglyphics are reported for 94 Araucanian Indians from the Argentinian Patag...
Digital and palmar dermatoglyphic patterns are analyzed and compared for 335 subjects from a Peruvia...
The inheritance of palmar pattern ridge counts for individual palmar areas, combined distal areas, a...
Quantitative finger and palmar dermatoglyphics of 218 individuals (170 males and 48 females) belongi...
This study aims to understand the distribution and sexual dimorphism of the a-b ridge count. A cross...
The nature and extent of dermatoglyphic variation in northwest India is examined with the help of 28...
A comparative study of the finger dermatoglyphics of two groups of a Muslim community Punjab. — Ther...
This is the published version, also available at http://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol76/iss2/...
Published data on palmar interdigital ridge counts (a-b, b-c, and c-d) among 57 populations from the...
Palmar dermatoglyphics of a sample including 552 males and 701 females from 8 Basque valleys were an...
Population variation in dermatoglyphic asymmetry and interdigital diversity is studied among 20 Dhan...
<p>The Nilo-Saharan Berta group manifested significantly higher Arches. The two Semitic groups manif...
Dermatoglyphics from two southern Peruvian Indian groups, Nunoa Quechua and Quechua ‘Pooled’, and a ...
Variations in asymmetry and interdigital diversity for the three finger-dermatoglyphic traits, total...
Abstract: The human body is covered with hairs and sebaceous glands except the palmar and plantar re...
Digital and palmar dermatoglyphics are reported for 94 Araucanian Indians from the Argentinian Patag...
Digital and palmar dermatoglyphic patterns are analyzed and compared for 335 subjects from a Peruvia...
The inheritance of palmar pattern ridge counts for individual palmar areas, combined distal areas, a...
Quantitative finger and palmar dermatoglyphics of 218 individuals (170 males and 48 females) belongi...
This study aims to understand the distribution and sexual dimorphism of the a-b ridge count. A cross...
The nature and extent of dermatoglyphic variation in northwest India is examined with the help of 28...
A comparative study of the finger dermatoglyphics of two groups of a Muslim community Punjab. — Ther...