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Skeletal Anatomy and Identification

Skeletal anatomy and identification is the practical core of osteology: knowing the bones and teeth of the human body well enough to recognize, side, and reassemble them from often fragmentary archaeological remains.

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Definition

The identification of human skeletal and dental elements—and their orientation, siding, and refitting—from complete or fragmentary remains recovered in archaeological contexts.

Scope

This topic covers the names, features, and landmarks of the 206 bones of the adult skeleton and the deciduous and permanent dentition, together with the techniques used to determine which side of the body an element comes from, to refit fragments, and to distinguish human from non-human bone. It is the prerequisite skill for inventorying remains and counting the minimum number of individuals in an assemblage.

Core questions

  • Which skeletal element and side does a given fragment represent?
  • How can human bone be distinguished from animal bone in mixed deposits?
  • How are commingled remains sorted and the minimum number of individuals estimated?
  • Which anatomical landmarks are diagnostic for siding and refitting incomplete elements?

Key theories

Element-based inventory
The convention of recording remains element by element using standardized osteological inventories, so that completeness, commingling, and minimum number of individuals can be assessed consistently.

History

Systematic bone-identification teaching descends from comparative anatomy and was codified for archaeology in field and laboratory manuals from the later 20th century, notably Bass's Human Osteology and White, Black, and Folkens's textbook, which together standardized how students learn to recognize and side skeletal elements.

Key figures

  • Tim D. White
  • William M. Bass
  • Louise Scheuer

Related topics

Seminal works

  • whiteblackfolkens2012
  • bass2005

Frequently asked questions

How many bones are in the adult human skeleton?
The adult skeleton conventionally has 206 bones, though counts vary slightly because of fused or accessory elements such as sesamoids and sutural bones.
Can fragmentary bone still be identified?
Often yes—diagnostic landmarks, cortical thickness, and joint surfaces let trained osteologists identify and side even small fragments, though confidence drops with size and weathering.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts