4.3 Article

Cranial Nonmetric Variation and Estimating Ancestry

Journal

JOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES
Volume 54, Issue 5, Pages 985-995

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2009.01118.x

Keywords

forensic science; morphoscopic traits; forensic anthropology; nonmetric traits; ancestry prediction

Funding

  1. Forensic Sciences Foundation Acorn

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Historically, when predicting the ancestry of human skeletal remains, forensic anthropologists have not fully considered the variation within human populations, but instead have relied on a typological, experience-based approach. Unfortunately, reliance on observer experience has produced a method that is as much an art as it is a science. This research focuses on the frequency distribution and inter-trait correlations of 11 common morphoscopic traits to demonstrate that the experience-based approach to ancestry prediction is indeed an art that is unscientific, because it is unreplicable, unreliable, and invalid. Ten of 11 traits examined had frequency distributions with significant differences (p < 0.001) between groups, but the range in variation of these traits far exceeds previous assumptions. Such within group variation clearly demonstrates that extreme trait expressions are not reliable for estimating ancestry through visual observation alone, but instead that these traits should be analyzed within a statistical framework.

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