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Evolutionary and anthropological perspectives on the sella turcica: from vertebrate origins to neurosurgical relevance. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Endocrinol Invest
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Human skeletal paleopathology

International Journal of Paleopathology, 2011
Human skeletal remains from archaeological contexts are the main source of data about the complex interaction between disease and humankind throughout the emergence of Homo sapiens. Past and current research on these remains has revealed the presence of many diseases that affect the skeleton today.
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Paleopathology

2013
The word paleopathology, derived from the Greek palaios, pathos, and logos, meaning liter- ally “study of ancient diseases,” was coined in 1892/3 by the German physicist R. W. Schufeldt and has appeared in the Standard Dictionary of Funk and Wagnall since 1895.
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Paleopathology of skeletal fluorosis

American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1999
Skeletal fluorosis is one of a range of conditions causing excessive ossification and joint ankylosis in skeletons. It is rarely considered, however, in differential diagnoses of palaeopathological lesions. This paper considers the identification of skeletal fluorosis in a skeletal sample from the island of Bahrain, Arabian Gulf, dating to ca.
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