Abstract Objectives This study compares the ontogenetic bone modeling patterns of the maxilla to the related morphological changes in three human populations to better understand how morphological variability within a species is established during ontogeny at both micro- and macroscopic levels. Materials and methods The maxillary bones of an ontogenetic sample of 145 subadult and adult individuals from Greenland (Inuit), Western Europe (France, Germany, and Portugal), and South Africa (Khoekhoe and San) were analyzed. Bone formation and resorption were quantified using histological methods to visualize the bone modeling patterns. In parallel, semilandmark geometric morphometric techniques were used on 3D models of the same individuals to ca...
Modern human and Neanderthal faces present clear morphological differences at all ontogenetic stages...
Adult craniofacial morphology results from complex processes that involve growth by bone modelling a...
Modern human populations differ in developmental processes and in several phenotypic traits. However...
Abstract Bone modeling is the process by which bone grows in size and models its shape via the cellu...
This thesis investigates the variability of ontogenetic maxillary bone modeling patterns in humans (...
The aim of this work is to assess the association between the patterns of bone modeling and the chan...
The morphology of facial bones is modeled by processes of bone formation and resorption induced by i...
This study examines interpopulation variations in the facial skeleton of 10 modern human populations...
This study examines interpopulation variations in the facial skeleton of 10 modern human populations...
Native human populations from South America display high levels of craniofacial variation encompassi...
Human skull morphology results from complex processes that involve the coordinated growth and intera...
The analysis of craniofacial morphology during ontogeny has a central role in evolutionary, developm...
This thesis examines variation in the modern human facial skeleton from an ontogenetic perspective, ...
Bone size and shape arise throughout ontogeny as a result of the coordinated activity of osteoblasts...
<div><p>The modern human face differs from that of our early ancestors in that the facial profile is...
Modern human and Neanderthal faces present clear morphological differences at all ontogenetic stages...
Adult craniofacial morphology results from complex processes that involve growth by bone modelling a...
Modern human populations differ in developmental processes and in several phenotypic traits. However...
Abstract Bone modeling is the process by which bone grows in size and models its shape via the cellu...
This thesis investigates the variability of ontogenetic maxillary bone modeling patterns in humans (...
The aim of this work is to assess the association between the patterns of bone modeling and the chan...
The morphology of facial bones is modeled by processes of bone formation and resorption induced by i...
This study examines interpopulation variations in the facial skeleton of 10 modern human populations...
This study examines interpopulation variations in the facial skeleton of 10 modern human populations...
Native human populations from South America display high levels of craniofacial variation encompassi...
Human skull morphology results from complex processes that involve the coordinated growth and intera...
The analysis of craniofacial morphology during ontogeny has a central role in evolutionary, developm...
This thesis examines variation in the modern human facial skeleton from an ontogenetic perspective, ...
Bone size and shape arise throughout ontogeny as a result of the coordinated activity of osteoblasts...
<div><p>The modern human face differs from that of our early ancestors in that the facial profile is...
Modern human and Neanderthal faces present clear morphological differences at all ontogenetic stages...
Adult craniofacial morphology results from complex processes that involve growth by bone modelling a...
Modern human populations differ in developmental processes and in several phenotypic traits. However...