Sexual dimorphism of the arm bones in a modern greek population.

J Forensic Sci

Department of Animal and Human Physiology, Faculty of Biology, School of Sciences, University of Athens, Panepistimiopolis, GR 157 01 Athens, Greece.

Published: January 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Several studies indicate that sex determination methods using skeletal measurements vary by population, with long bone traits being reliable indicators of sex.
  • This research focused on the arm bones (humerus, radius, ulna) of 204 adults from Greece to assess their effectiveness for sex determination.
  • The findings showed high accuracy rates of sex discrimination (90.30% for ulna, 95.70% for humerus) and consistent measurement errors, confirming that these bone metrics are population-specific and can effectively indicate sex in skeletal remains from Greece.

Article Abstract

Several studies have shown that sex determination methods based on measurements of the skeleton are population specific. Metric traits of the long bones of the arm have been reported as reliable indicators of sex. This study was designed to determine whether the three long bones of the arm can be used for sex determination on a skeletal population from Greece. The material used consists of the arm bones of 204 adult individuals (111 males and 93 females) coming from the Modern Human Skeletal Collection of the University of Athens. The age range is 19-96 years for males and 20-99 years for females. The maximum lengths and epiphyseal widths were measured in the long bones of the arm (humerus, radius, and ulna). The discriminant analysis of the metrical data of each long bone gave very high discrimination accuracies. The rate of correct sex discrimination based on different long bones ranges from 90.30% (ulna) to 95.70% (humerus). In addition, intra- and inter-observer error tests were performed. These indicated that replication of measurements was satisfactory for the same observer over time and between observers. The results of this study show that metric characteristics of the arm bones can be used for the determination of sex in skeletal remains from Greece and that bone dimensions are population specific.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1556-4029.2010.01538.xDOI Listing

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