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Bone Histology: A Biological Anthropological Perspective, Second Edition builds on the success of the first edition, recognizing the significant advances that have occurred in bone biology, histology, and histological techniques and methods in subsequent years.
List of contents
1. Bone Remodeling and its Histomorphological Products
2. Making the Mold: A Microstructural Perspective on Bone Growth and Mechanical Adaptation through Bone Modeling
3. Pediatric bone histomorphology and environmental stresses
4. Skeletal Fracture: Biomechanics and Forensic Perspectives
5. Biomechanical Foundations of Histological Analysis in Limb Bones: The Crucial Role of Load-Complexity Categorization and Collagen Fiber Orientation Analysis when Interpreting Bone Adaptation
6. Histological Features of Dental Hard Tissues: Methodologies and Utilities in Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology
7. Human vs Non-human: Bone Microstructure in Species Differentiation and Experimental Research
8. Age-at-Death Estimation from Bone Microstructure
9. The Histopathological Analysis of Human Skeletal Remains
10. Histological analyses of human bone from archaeological contexts
11. Skeletal Collections for Histological and Imaging Research
12. Three-dimensional Microstructural Imaging of Bone: Technological Developments and Anthropological Applications
13. Visualization and Interpretation of Cortical Porosity
About the author
Sam D. Stout is Professor Emeritus of anthropology at The Ohio State University.
Christian Crowder, PhD, D-ABFA is the Chief of the Human Identification and Anthropology Laboratories for the Tarrant County Medical Examiner's Office in Fort Worth, TX.
Summary
Bone Histology: A Biological Anthropological Perspective, Second Edition builds on the success of the first edition, recognizing the significant advances that have occurred in bone biology, histology, and histological techniques and methods in subsequent years.