Biological mortality bias is the concept that within a population, the individuals who die (non-survivors) are biologically different from their surviving peers. Because non-survivors may have experienced more health insults during their lives than survivors, they may differ from survivors in their biological phenotypes. Thus, if biological mortality bias exists and is substantial in magnitude, interpretations of past population health made from skeletal samples (non-survivors) may not accurately reflect the health of the surviving population. This dissertation explores biological mortality bias as reflected in the growth of juvenile individuals aged birth to 12 years. Growth is known to be susceptible to environmental influences, and thus ...
This thesis investigates changes in Iroquoian infant mortality and juvenile growth between 1250 and ...
Dental development is considered the most accurate method of age estimation in subadults, as this pr...
Objective: This study evaluates patterns of human growth in the Neolithic to make inferences about e...
Auxological studies in bioarcheology provide valuable information about the health of children in pa...
The osteological paradox addresses how well interpretations of past population health generated from...
In 2006, an excavation in Santa Casa da Misericórdia de Faro, Portugal, revealed a cemetery (16th-19...
grantor: University of TorontoA growth deficit in juveniles, specifically toddlers, has be...
Estimates of age at death that are both accurate and precise and provide information about the patte...
International audienceThe coupling between maturation and growth in the age estimation of young indi...
Estimating age at death is among the first steps in the identification of an unknown individual. For...
Although the association between social inequality and poor adult health is well established, the me...
Childhood morbidity profiles of a culturally diverse prehistoric skeletal sample have been construct...
Objectives Isotope ratio analyses of dentine collagen were used to characterize short-term change...
Mortality profiles of five prehistoric populations have been constructed utilizing paleodemographic ...
Age-at-death estimations of 44 individuals (27 adults, 17 children) from the Branch Davidian sample ...
This thesis investigates changes in Iroquoian infant mortality and juvenile growth between 1250 and ...
Dental development is considered the most accurate method of age estimation in subadults, as this pr...
Objective: This study evaluates patterns of human growth in the Neolithic to make inferences about e...
Auxological studies in bioarcheology provide valuable information about the health of children in pa...
The osteological paradox addresses how well interpretations of past population health generated from...
In 2006, an excavation in Santa Casa da Misericórdia de Faro, Portugal, revealed a cemetery (16th-19...
grantor: University of TorontoA growth deficit in juveniles, specifically toddlers, has be...
Estimates of age at death that are both accurate and precise and provide information about the patte...
International audienceThe coupling between maturation and growth in the age estimation of young indi...
Estimating age at death is among the first steps in the identification of an unknown individual. For...
Although the association between social inequality and poor adult health is well established, the me...
Childhood morbidity profiles of a culturally diverse prehistoric skeletal sample have been construct...
Objectives Isotope ratio analyses of dentine collagen were used to characterize short-term change...
Mortality profiles of five prehistoric populations have been constructed utilizing paleodemographic ...
Age-at-death estimations of 44 individuals (27 adults, 17 children) from the Branch Davidian sample ...
This thesis investigates changes in Iroquoian infant mortality and juvenile growth between 1250 and ...
Dental development is considered the most accurate method of age estimation in subadults, as this pr...
Objective: This study evaluates patterns of human growth in the Neolithic to make inferences about e...