The Skull of Quadruped and Bipedal Vertebrates. Djillali Hadjouis
inflammation of the latter and carious disease of the jugal teeth (© Hadjouis)Figure 16.25. Craniofacial structural analysis by teleradiography of the profile of an Iberomaurusian man from Afalou (© Hadjouis, Katz)Figure 16.26. Craniofacial structural analysis by teleradiography of the profile of an Iberomaurusian woman from Afalou (© Hadjouis, Katz). For a color version of the figure, see www.iste.co.uk/hadjouis/skull.zip
12 Chapter 17Figure 17.1. Double angular depression on the parietal wall of a probably male adult skull. The diagnosis of this atrophy is part of parietal thinning and leans toward phenotypic expression obeliac dysplasia (© Hadjouis)Figure 17.2. Upper-inferior incisivo-canine and milky premolar series and M1 buds of a child aged about 12 months from the modern levels of the necropolis of Chennevières-sur-Marne. The brown and brownish pigmentation of the dental crowns in relation to lesions of the skeleton of the limbs (juvenile osteoporosis, childhood osteomyelitis) suggests a diagnosis of scurvy by gingival hemorrhage (© Hadjouis)
List of Tables
1 Chapter 3Table 3.1. Distinguishing criteria for Bos primigenius and Syncerus antiquus
Guide
1 Cover
9 Index
10 Other titles from iSTE in Biology and Biomedical Engineering
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