An estimate of how many individuals are represented in a commingled assemblage is important to interpret the wider context (archaeologically or forensically), for further analyses, and for palaeodemographic studies. The aim of this study was to establish whether the Minimum Number of Individuals (MNI) and Minimum Number of Elements (MNE) estimates produced by three different methods (traditional MNI (White, 1953); zonation method (Knüsel and Outram, 2004); the landmark method (Mack et al., 2015)) are the same or, if different, to evaluate these differences. The methods were applied to an assemblage recovered from a Spanish medieval cemetery from Navarra and used to estimate the Number of Identified Specimens (NISP), the MNI and the MNE acco...
Forensic Anthropologists around the world use a variety of techniques to understand people using ana...
In 2015, a Florida forensic anthropology laboratory received a commingled assemblage of human remain...
Two cornerstones of conventional wisdom in interpreting commingled assemblages are (a) the MNI provi...
Commingled and fragmentary human remains are a common occurrence in archaeological and forensic cont...
The analysis of human remains in archaeological contexts is often complicated by the presence of hig...
Many common methods for establishing the number of individuals represented by a skeletal assemblage ...
Reproduced with permission of the publisher. Copyright © Oxbow Books and the Association for Environ...
This thesis concerns the use of the Lincoln/Petersen Index (LI) for quantification studies of commin...
L’estimation du Nombre Minimum d’Individus (NMI) constitue une étape essentielle de l’étude des ense...
In a commingled context, assessing that a talus and a calcaneus correspond to the same individual co...
The analysis and subsequent disentanglement of human skeletal elements from commingled or mixed buri...
The fragmentation and commingling of ancient human remains, particularly those from disturbed contex...
Estimation of the Minimum Number of Individuals (MNI) constitutes an essential stage of the study of...
Most analyses of relative skeletal abundances in archaeological contexts are based on units derived,...
Individualisation of commingled remains is the first step towards identification of skeletal remain...
Forensic Anthropologists around the world use a variety of techniques to understand people using ana...
In 2015, a Florida forensic anthropology laboratory received a commingled assemblage of human remain...
Two cornerstones of conventional wisdom in interpreting commingled assemblages are (a) the MNI provi...
Commingled and fragmentary human remains are a common occurrence in archaeological and forensic cont...
The analysis of human remains in archaeological contexts is often complicated by the presence of hig...
Many common methods for establishing the number of individuals represented by a skeletal assemblage ...
Reproduced with permission of the publisher. Copyright © Oxbow Books and the Association for Environ...
This thesis concerns the use of the Lincoln/Petersen Index (LI) for quantification studies of commin...
L’estimation du Nombre Minimum d’Individus (NMI) constitue une étape essentielle de l’étude des ense...
In a commingled context, assessing that a talus and a calcaneus correspond to the same individual co...
The analysis and subsequent disentanglement of human skeletal elements from commingled or mixed buri...
The fragmentation and commingling of ancient human remains, particularly those from disturbed contex...
Estimation of the Minimum Number of Individuals (MNI) constitutes an essential stage of the study of...
Most analyses of relative skeletal abundances in archaeological contexts are based on units derived,...
Individualisation of commingled remains is the first step towards identification of skeletal remain...
Forensic Anthropologists around the world use a variety of techniques to understand people using ana...
In 2015, a Florida forensic anthropology laboratory received a commingled assemblage of human remain...
Two cornerstones of conventional wisdom in interpreting commingled assemblages are (a) the MNI provi...