Forensic anthropology represents the application of our knowledge and techniques of physical anthropology to medico-legal problems. Historically, such applications have focused on skeletal remains,...doi:10.1007/0-387-29905-X_5Douglas H. Ubelaker...
doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_155Forensic anthropology and archaeology have significantly improved human rights work throughout the world, particularly in contexts where investigations are carried out following armed conflicts where...Baraybar, José PabloSpringer New York...
Forensic anthropology is the application of physical anthropology in special cases with forensic importance, such as to identify the skeletonized human remains. Skull, Forensic Evidence ofdoi:10.1007/978-0-387-73003-5_854M.P. EvisonSpringer US...
forensic anthropologyforensic anthropologist at crime scene/mortuary, guidelines/protocolsforensic anthropologists in criminal investigationforensic anthropologist, in recovering human skeletal remainsanthropologists' knowledge of human skeletal/bone fragmentsanthropologist and detailed inventory of bones, present/missing...
doi:10.1007/978-3-030-30018-0_156Forensic anthropology has continued to demonstrate its usefulness to the field of disaster response since the publication of T. Dale Stewart's Personal Identification in Mass Disasters(1970). Today,...Emery, Eric B....
Forensic Anthropology: DefinitionSince the development of the discipline, forensic anthropology has been defined in different ways depending on the context (Blau and Ubelaker 2009). Initially defined by Stewart (1979: ix), forensic...doi:10.1007/978-3-030-30018-0_130L. Fondebrider...
Bioarchaeology, Human Osteology, and Forensic Anthropology: Definitions and Developmentsdoi:10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_126The analysis and interpretation of human skeletal remains focuses largely on what can be learned from these remnants, as well as the individuals and populations they represent. The...
Introduction and Definition The study of juvenile human skeletal remains in archaeological and forensic contexts is a relatively new development in bioarchaeology. Children (subadults, non-adults) are variably defined as those individuals aged up to 15, 17, 20, or even 25 years, but skeletons ...