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Osteological Age & Sex Estimation

Osteological age and sex estimation is the foundational bioarchaeological procedure for building a biological profile from human skeletal remains: estimating how old an individual was at death and determining their biological sex. The skeleton changes in patterned ways across life — teeth form and erupt, growth plates fuse, and joint surfaces and bone microstructure gradually degenerate — and these changes are scored against reference standards to bracket age, while sexually dimorphic features of the pelvis and skull indicate sex. The standardized recording protocols compiled by Jane Buikstra and Douglas Ubelaker provide the discipline's shared methodology, ensuring that age and sex estimates are comparable across analysts and collections. Because the relationship between skeletal change and chronological age is variable, the method emphasizes multiple indicators and explicit uncertainty.

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Osteological Age & Sex Estimation
Ancient DNA AnalysisPaleodemographic Analysis

Sources

  1. Buikstra, J. E., & Ubelaker, D. H. (1994). Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 44. ISBN: 9781563490750

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Osteological Age-at-Death and Sex Estimation from Human Skeletal Remains. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/archaeology/osteological-age-estimation

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ScholarGateOsteological Age & Sex Estimation (Osteological Age-at-Death and Sex Estimation from Human Skeletal Remains). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/archaeology/osteological-age-estimation · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026