Results 191 to 200 of about 439,459 (310)
Assessing the effectiveness of the one paleopathology workshop. [PDF]
Stamer JR +35 more
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Neuroanatomical research has progressed considerably in several vertebrate lineages, yet studies of reptilian brain morphology remain markedly underdeveloped. Here we provide the first description of macroscopic brain anatomy and its ontogeny in the viperid Bothrops moojeni, based on a sample of seven individuals.
Paula Araújo +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Exploration of hanging coffin customs and the bo people in China through comparative genomics. [PDF]
Zhou H +30 more
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract In a large sample of adult crab‐eating macaques, we quantified sexual dimorphism in size, shape, and covariance across the whole skull and among anatomical regions of the cranium and mandible. All regions showed significant mean sex differences, but the magnitude of size and shape dimorphism varied substantially.
Andrea Cardini, Paul O'Higgins
wiley +1 more source
Commentary on Special Issue: "Towards a Biocultural Synthesis of the Peopling of the Americas". [PDF]
Nieves-Colón MA.
europepmc +1 more source
The Anthropologist as Witness: Humanitarianism between Ethnography and Critique Nicolas Guilhot [PDF]
Musarò, Pierluigi
core
Abstract The preauricular sulcus has long been debated as a pelvic feature variably attributed to obstetric stress, ligamentous traction, and broader biomechanical processes. To clarify its determinants, we analyzed 409 adult individuals from three archeological and one early modern skeletal collection from the Iberian Peninsula, integrating graded ...
Rebeca García‐González +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Tracing social mechanisms and interregional connections in Early Bronze Age Societies in Lower Austria. [PDF]
Furtwängler A +29 more
europepmc +1 more source
Mission, Local Culture and the 'Catholic Ethnology' of Pater Schmidt [PDF]
Dietrich, Stefan
core +3 more sources
Abstract Arhinolemur scalabrinii† Ameghino, 1898 was originally described as a strepsirrhine primate (Mammalia) but has been recognized as an anostomid fish since 2012. It remains the only extinct anostomid species known from complete cranial material.
Karen M. Panzeri +8 more
wiley +1 more source

