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Test of the lateral angle method of sex estimation on Anglo‐Saxon and Medieval archaeological populations with genetically estimated sex

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posted on 2024-03-05, 16:04 authored by Jess E Thompson, Sarah A Inskip, Christiana L Scheib, Jessica Bates, Xiangyu Ge, Samuel J Griffith, Anthony Wilder Wohns, John E Robb

The lateral angle method of sex estimation is tested on an archaeological population with genetic sex estimates. Casts of the internal auditory canal were made using a quick drying impression material on 90 individuals (76 adults and 14 nonadults) from Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Cambridgeshire. The anterior and posterior angles of the internal auditory canal were measured, and the relationship of the angle to genetic sex was tested. The posterior angle failed intra-observer error tests, and only the anterior angle could be analysed. Using the previously published sectioning point for unburnt remains (45°), the method did not adequately distinguish between the sexes. Furthermore, the difference between male and female was insufficient to create population-specific discriminant functions. The anterior angle does not meet the requirements for an osteological method of sex estimation, exhibiting no statistical correlation with genetic sex in this population.

Funding

H2020 European Research Council. Grant Number: 885137

Wellcome Trust. Grant Number: 2000368/Z/15/Z

History

Author affiliation

School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Archaeometry

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0003-813X

eissn

1475-4754

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-11-07

Language

en

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