Inter-population variability in long-bone and pelvic-bone growth during the Early Medieval period is examined. The materials comprise four archaeological populations: two Slavonic (Gars–Thunau, Zwentendorf, Austria, 10th-century ad), one Avar (Zwölfaxing, Austria, 8th-century ad), and one Anglo-Saxon (Raunds, England, 10th-century ad). Bone measurements are analyzed against dental age estimates in order to assess inter-population differences in growth rates for long-bone and os coxae bone dimensions. Growth curves of the upper and lower extremities of additional archaeological populations and a modern North-American population are also assessed. The expectation was that the greatest differences in growth patterns would be found between the ...
An archaeological investigation of a medieval cemetery gave us the opportunity to investigate 49 Dan...
This study compares associations between demographic profiles, long bone lengths, bone mineral conte...
Humans like all animal species, are subject to Bergmann\u27s (1847) and Allen\u27s (1877) environmen...
Inter-population variability in long-bone and pelvic-bone growth during the Early Medieval period is...
NoBACKGROUND: Vitamin D deficiency rickets is associated with skeletal deformities including swollen...
Abstract: The authors attempted to determine the tendencies in the development of long bones (femur ...
Understanding the links between bone microstructure and human lifestyle is critical for clinical and...
Phenotypic traits develop and are maintained by complex interactions between intrinsic (molecular) a...
Humans, like all animal species, are subject to Bergmann's (1847) and Allen's (1877) environmental r...
Human culture, biology, and health were shaped dramatically by the onset of agriculture ~12,000 year...
Growth-attained curves have shown only limited effectiveness in studies of long bone growth in archa...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Anthropology...
Growth of four variables of the femur (diapyseal length, diaphyseal length plus distal epiphysis, ma...
While a wide variety of studies have focused on population variation in adult cross-sectional proper...
Analyses of stature variation in prehistoric and historical populations encounter considerable probl...
An archaeological investigation of a medieval cemetery gave us the opportunity to investigate 49 Dan...
This study compares associations between demographic profiles, long bone lengths, bone mineral conte...
Humans like all animal species, are subject to Bergmann\u27s (1847) and Allen\u27s (1877) environmen...
Inter-population variability in long-bone and pelvic-bone growth during the Early Medieval period is...
NoBACKGROUND: Vitamin D deficiency rickets is associated with skeletal deformities including swollen...
Abstract: The authors attempted to determine the tendencies in the development of long bones (femur ...
Understanding the links between bone microstructure and human lifestyle is critical for clinical and...
Phenotypic traits develop and are maintained by complex interactions between intrinsic (molecular) a...
Humans, like all animal species, are subject to Bergmann's (1847) and Allen's (1877) environmental r...
Human culture, biology, and health were shaped dramatically by the onset of agriculture ~12,000 year...
Growth-attained curves have shown only limited effectiveness in studies of long bone growth in archa...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Anthropology...
Growth of four variables of the femur (diapyseal length, diaphyseal length plus distal epiphysis, ma...
While a wide variety of studies have focused on population variation in adult cross-sectional proper...
Analyses of stature variation in prehistoric and historical populations encounter considerable probl...
An archaeological investigation of a medieval cemetery gave us the opportunity to investigate 49 Dan...
This study compares associations between demographic profiles, long bone lengths, bone mineral conte...
Humans like all animal species, are subject to Bergmann\u27s (1847) and Allen\u27s (1877) environmen...