## Abstract The precision and accuracy of the Kerley and AhlqvistβDamsten microscopic methods of age determination are compared. Both methods were applied to the same sample of 40 femoral thin sections of documented age at death. The results indicate that (1) both methods can be used with equal pre
Comparison of Two Methods of Estimating Age at Death in a Chilean Preceramic Population
β Scribed by M. F. ERICKSEN
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 123 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1047-482X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A method of histological determination of age at death, using the anterior cortex of the femur, was tested on a group of adult Preceramic skeletons from Chile (ca. 3300Β±3000 years BP). These skeletons had been previously studied by another investigator who assigned sex and morphological ages. Comparison of the results of the two methods of ageing indicates that, although there is considerable agreement between them at younger ages (20Β±39 years), discrepancies increase at older ages. It is clear that the morphological method is `truncated', i.e. it does not take into account the possibility that some individuals could live past the age of 45 years. On the other hand, the open-ended histological method gives a realistic age range of 20Β±65 years for the Preceramic group, but an unrealistic number of individuals are aged 50 years and older. It is concluded that, in spite of certain advantages, the histological method must be used with caution in archaeological studies because exfoliation of peripheral unremodelled bone lamellae can cause over-ageing as deeper, more remodelled areas come to lie nearer the periosteal surface.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Comparison of different adult age estimation methods on the same skeletal sample with unknown ages could forward paleodemographic inference, while researchers sort out various controversies. The original aging method for the auricular surface (Lovejoy et al., 1985a) assigned an age esti
## Abstract Problems recently discovered in the Kerley method of estimating age at death from cortical microstructure are discussed. Kerley's original data have been reβanalyzed to produce new regression equations and to document the original field size.
## Abstract The poor accuracy of most current methods for estimating ageβatβdeath in adult human skeletal remains is among the key problems facing palaeodemography. In forensic science, this problem has been solved for unburnt remains by the development of a chemical method for age estimation, usin