TY - BOOK ID - 5266051 TI - Developmental juvenile osteology AU - Scheuer, Louise AU - Black, Sue M. AU - Christie, Angela PY - 2000 SN - 0126240000 9780126240009 9786611037369 1281037362 0080530389 9780080530383 9781281037367 PB - San Diego, CA Academic Press DB - UniCat KW - Bones KW - Human skeleton KW - Os KW - Squelette humain KW - ELSEVIER-B EPUB-LIV-FT KW - Human anatomy KW - Skeleton KW - Growth KW - Bone Development KW - Bone Diseases, Developmental KW - Bone and Bones KW - Child KW - Infant KW - Skeletons KW - Infants KW - Children KW - Minors KW - Bone KW - Bones and Bone KW - Bones and Bone Tissue KW - Bony Apophyses KW - Bony Apophysis KW - Condyle KW - Bone Tissue KW - Apophyses, Bony KW - Apophysis, Bony KW - Bone Tissues KW - Condyles KW - Tissue, Bone KW - Tissues, Bone KW - Developmental Bone Disease KW - Bone Dysplasias KW - Bone Disease, Developmental KW - Bone Dysplasia KW - Developmental Bone Diseases KW - Dysplasia, Bone KW - Dysplasias, Bone KW - Connective Tissue Diseases KW - Growth Disorders KW - Bone Growth KW - Calcification, Physiologic KW - Growth Plate KW - growth & development KW - Human skeleton. KW - Forensic osteology. KW - Medicolegal osteology KW - Osteology, Forensic KW - Forensic anthropology KW - Medical jurisprudence KW - 42.85 physical anthropology. KW - 15.30 archaeology: general. KW - Squelette. KW - Os et tissu osseux KW - Développement de l'enfant. KW - Osteologie. KW - Kind. KW - Entwicklung. KW - Anthropologie. KW - Knochenfund. KW - Rechtsmedizin. KW - Archeologie. KW - Kinderen. KW - Bot (anatomie). KW - Biologie du développement. KW - Enfants KW - Restes humains (archéologie). KW - Human remains (Archaeology). KW - Bone Development. KW - Bone Diseases, Developmental. KW - Bone and Bones. KW - Child. KW - Infant. KW - Skeleton. KW - Growth. KW - Croissance. KW - Croissance et développement. KW - University of Dundee KW - Staff author. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:5266051 AB - "The correct identification of the skeletal components of the juvenile skeleton is critical to the analysis of human remains. This book by Louise Scheuer and Sue Black brings together information from the vast and widely dispersed anthropological and medical literature. It is aimed primarily at physical anthropologists, archaeologists and forensic pathologists but should prove of interest to a much wider scientific and clinical readership." "The individual sections are fully referenced and profusely illustrated with new drawings of bones at successive stages of development. Each section closes with 'Practical Notes', which summarize previous information, describe how to side and distinguish a bone from others of a similar morphology and give detailed metrics from documented sources." "Any scientist interested in human skeletal biology will find this an essential text. It will prove to be invaluable in the laboratory, to identify and age juvenile bones, and in the library, as a basis for further study of any part of the human skeleton."--Jacket. ER -