Results 161 to 170 of about 1,237 (198)

Unveiling the complexity of post-Roman polity formation using ancient DNA

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Tian Y   +28 more
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Bioanthropological Research in Developing Countries

Annual Review of Anthropology, 1985
In recent years the number of biological anthropologists involved in research in developing countries has increased. This upsurge of interest can be traced in part to an increased awareness of the problems faced by populations in these countries and to an increased realization that anthropologists are well equipped to address those problems. Though the
R Huss-Ashmore, F E Johnston
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Analyzing asymmetries and praxis in aDNA research: A bioanthropological critique

American Anthropologist, 2021
AbstractRecent developments in molecular‐biology‐oriented studies regarding ancient DNA (aDNA) from human remains have brought into the contemporary discussions within archaeologists, bioanthropologists, and geneticists a set of disputes, tensions, and collaborations that need to be analyzed in practical and epistemological terms.
Bernardo Yáñez   +2 more
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The Bioanthropological Context of Disease

American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 1993
Apparent differences in susceptibility to disease continue to be major delineators between human groups. From the vantage of human evolutionary biology, disease is the biocultural product of the interactions of human biology, culture, and ecology.
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AIDS in Africa: A bioanthropological perspective

American Journal of Human Biology, 1990
AbstractThe epidemiological characteristics of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in Africa are reviewed. Infection rates with human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV‐1) and human immunodeficiency virus 2 (HIV‐2) vary across the continent of Africa with the highest infection rates occurring in East and Central Africa.
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Cronos project. Bioanthropology of guanche mummies

Canarias Arqueológica, 2021
For those who had de privilege to meet Arthur and Mary during their first visits to Tenerife during the 1980s and 1990s, the couple will always be linked to the so-called Cronos Project. Bioanthropology guanche mummies that was organized by Tenerife’s Archaeological Museum, belonging to the Organismo Autónomo de Museos y Centros of the Cabildo de ...
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Genetic landscape of the Hvar Island – highlight of a 50-year long bioanthropological research

Anthropologischer Anzeiger, 2022
The paper presents an overview of the 50-year long bioanthropological research of the Hvar islanders and depicts the maternal and paternal genetic landscape of the Hvar population (mtDNA and NRY lineages) in more detail. MtDNA haplogroups were determined in 169 and NRY haplogroups in 407 autochthonous individuals from the Hvar Island.
Šarac, Jelena   +7 more
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Hearing and the bioanthropology of speech

Journal of Social and Biological Systems, 1989
Abstract This paper endeavours to answer the question of whether there has been an evolutionary effect on the human auditory system due to the fact that Homo sapiens talks. It is argued that no cause-and-effect relationship can be demonstrated anatomically or physiologically. If there has been an effect, it is the other way around; we make the sounds
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