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- Title
Geographic Variation in Zygomaxillary Suture Morphology and its Use in Ancestry Estimation.
- Authors
Maddux, Scott D.; Sporleder, Alexandria N.; Burns, Casey E.
- Abstract
Angled/curved zygomaxillary suture coding is widely employed in cranial assessments of ancestry. However, the efficacy of this method has not been extensively evaluated across diverse populations. In this study, zygomaxillary suture morphology was assessed on a total of 411 human crania from six populations (European, Native American, African, Asian, Arctic Circle, and Aboriginal Australian) using a novel 3D coordinate landmark method. Our results indicate a predominance of angled sutures among native peoples of the Arctic and North America (85-86%), a prevalence of curved sutures among Africans and Aboriginal Australians (77-81%), and essentially equal proportions of both configurations in Asians and Europeans (50-56%). Statistically, angled/curved coding generally discriminates poorly between groups, except when populations with antithetically high frequencies of the two configurations (e.g., African vs. Native American) are compared. Moreover, comparisons across previous studies reveal conflicting frequencies for many populations, further suggesting limited utility of this trait in ancestry estimation.
- Subjects
MAXILLA surgery; SUTURES; GENEALOGY; MEDICAL geography; POPULATION genetics
- Publication
Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2015, Vol 60, Issue 4, p966
- ISSN
0022-1198
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1556-4029.12774