
This approach to sample construction engages skeletal remains as biological and social products, and enhances the social and translational implications of our research practices. The mechanics of this process were informed by a critical and humanistic orientation toward human biological study built upon the following premises: (1) scientific investigation is not an objective or passive practice, nor must it be and, (2) relevant, publically accessible human biological research requires competence with social justice issues, as well as previous and current scholarship focused on addressing those issues. We argue that this step is necessary to construct a data set that reflects the demographic breadth (age, ethnicity, social class) of the original collection, taking into account a substantial number of skeletons lost during storage and disuse.
Essential anatomy 3 obb series#
The merging allows for the inclusion of individuals from the original series for whom we no longer have skeletons.

Nowakowski,4 Konstantin Khodosevich,5 Kjeld Møllgard,6 Arnold R. Strip away multiple layers of muscle using the 'layering' tool.

These include Muscular, Skeletal, Connective Tissue, Venous, Arterial (Including the Heart), Nervous (Including the Brain), Respiratory, Digestive, Lymphatic, Urogenital, and Skin.

This article outlines the process of constructing an improved study sample for biocultural analysis by merging skeletal remains from the collection with their associated texts. Neuroserpin expression during human brain development and in adult brain revealed by immunohistochemistry and single cell RNA sequencing Istvan Adorjan,1,2,3 Teadora Tyler,1 Aparna Bhaduri,4 Samuel Demharter,5 Cintia Klaudia Finszter,1 Maria Bako,1 Oliver Marcell Sebok,1 Tomasz J. Essential Anatomy 5 contains 11 complete systems which can be accessed from the main screen. Montague Cobb skeletal collection, mainly comprised of African Americans living in Washington, DC, before 1969, is an important collection for human biological studies of the African Diaspora. Montague Cobb skeletal collection, mainly comprised of African Americans living in Washington, DC, before 1969, is an important collection for human biological studies of the African Diaspora. Repositioning the C obb human archive: The merger of a skeletal collection and its texts Repositioning the C obb human archive: The merger of a skeletal collection and its textsĪBSTRACT The W.
