Results 171 to 180 of about 2,258 (204)
[Craniometry in 1,002 Chilean newborn infants].
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American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1977
AbstractA method is described whereby three‐dimensional co‐ordinates of points on a cranium can be recorded in terms of azimuth, elevation and radial distance from a selected point. These co‐ordinates can be used to create two‐dimensional representations of single crania, the differences between many crania or growth stages of individuals or series of ...
O J, Oyen, A, Walker
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AbstractA method is described whereby three‐dimensional co‐ordinates of points on a cranium can be recorded in terms of azimuth, elevation and radial distance from a selected point. These co‐ordinates can be used to create two‐dimensional representations of single crania, the differences between many crania or growth stages of individuals or series of ...
O J, Oyen, A, Walker
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The vanishing Black Indian: Revisiting craniometry and historic collections
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2016AbstractObjectivesThis article uses craniometric allocation as a platform for discussing the legacy of Samuel G. Morton's collection of crania, the process of racialization, and the value of contextualized biohistoric research perspectives in biological anthropology.Materials and MethodsStandard craniometric measurements were recorded for seven ...
Pamela L. Geller +1 more
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A New Craniometer and Suggestions for Craniometry
Journal of Mammalogy, 1968A craniometer including a mechanical stage on a dissecting microscope is described. Some prior methods, current problems, and possible future developments in methods of measurement are noted.
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Intra‐ and interobserver error in craniometry: A cautionary tale
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1982AbstractThis study investigates intra‐ and interobserver measurement error in craniometry. Data consists of 72 craniometric measurements taken on a series of 28 Sadlermuit Eskimo crania. Utermohle measured the series twice; Zegura measured it once.
C J, Utermohle, S L, Zegura
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CRANIOMETRY IN DISEASES OF CHILDREN
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1915There is a close conformation of the brain to the size and shape of the skull, and for this reason measurements of the craniums of living subjects must become of increasing importance. Studies directed to the changing brain mass by means of craniometry appeal especially to students of diseases of children because developments of physiologic and ...
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Cranio-cervical junction: craniometry and anomalies
2018Learning objectives Background Findings and procedure details Conclusion Personal information ...
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Craniometry, Race, and the Artist in Willa Cather
Prospects, 2002Willa Cather's description of Blind d'Arnault, the black pianoplaying prodigy inMy Ántonia(1918), is shocking. “He had the Negro head,” Cather's narrator, Jim Burden, tells us, “almost no head at all; nothing behind the ears but folds of neck under close-clipped wool” (139).
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[Occipitocervical junction: Aanatomy, craniometry and pathology].
Der Radiologe, 2016The occipitocervical junction comprises of the occiput condyles, the atlas, and the axis. The radiological evaluation of this region is supported by craniometric measurement methods which are based on predefined anatomical landmarks. The main pathologies of the occipitocervical junction are traumatic injuries, congenital anomalies or normal variants ...
J, Furtner +4 more
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