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      Ethnogenesis and craniofacial change in Japan from the perspective of nonmetric traits

      , , ,
      Anthropological Science
      Anthropological Society of Nippon

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          A Review of the Osteological Characteristics of the Jomon Population in Prehistoric Japan

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            Metric and Nonmetric Cranial Variation of the Prehistoric Okhotsk People.

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              Frequency variations of discrete cranial traits in major human populations. III. Hyperostotic variations.

              Seven discrete cranial traits usually categorised as hyperostotic characters, the medial palatine canal, hypoglossal canal bridging, precondylar tubercle, condylus tertius, jugular foramen bridging, auditory exostosis, and mylohyoid bridging were investigated in 81 major human population samples from around the world. Significant asymmetric occurrences of the bilateral traits were detected in the medial palatine canal and jugular foramen bridging in several samples. Significant intertrait associations were found between some pairs of the traits, but not consistently across the large geographical samples. The auditory exostosis showed a predominant occurrence in males. With the exception of the auditory exostosis and mylohyoid bridging in a few samples, significant sex differences were slight. The frequency distributions of the traits (except for the auditory exostosis) showed some interregional clinality and intraregional discontinuity, suggesting that genetic drift could have contributed to the observed pattern of variation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Anthropological Science
                AS
                Anthropological Society of Nippon
                0918-7960
                1348-8570
                2006
                2006
                : 114
                : 2
                : 99-115
                Article
                10.1537/ase.00090
                972d9899-f769-4eb4-a6a5-cd22ba3aa24e
                © 2006
                History

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