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Dawnie Wolfe Steadman
Researcher at University of Tennessee
Publications - 68
Citations - 1904
Dawnie Wolfe Steadman is an academic researcher from University of Tennessee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Forensic anthropology & Population. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 63 publications receiving 1613 citations. Previous affiliations of Dawnie Wolfe Steadman include Iowa State University & Binghamton University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Pre-Columbian mycobacterial genomes reveal seals as a source of New World human tuberculosis
Kirsten I. Bos,Kelly M. Harkins,Alexander Herbig,Mireia Coscolla,Nico Weber,Iñaki Comas,Stephen Forrest,Josephine M. Bryant,Simon R. Harris,Verena J. Schuenemann,Tessa J. Campbell,Kerttu Majander,Alicia K. Wilbur,Ricardo Aníbal Guichón,Dawnie Wolfe Steadman,Della Collins Cook,Stefan Niemann,Marcel A. Behr,Martín José Zumárraga,Ricardo Bastida,Daniel H. Huson,Kay Nieselt,Douglas B. Young,Julian Parkhill,Jane E. Buikstra,Sebastien Gagneux,Anne C. Stone,Johannes Krause +27 more
TL;DR: Three 1,000-year-old mycobacterial genomes from Peruvian human skeletons are presented, revealing that a member of the M. tuberculosis complex caused human disease before contact and implicate sea mammals as having played a role in transmitting the disease to humans across the ocean.
Journal ArticleDOI
Estimation and evidence in forensic anthropology: sex and race.
TL;DR: This analysis shows the extreme importance of an informative prior in any forensic application and shows that the sex of the individual can be reliably estimated using a small set of 11 craniometric variables.
Journal ArticleDOI
Statistical basis for positive identification in forensic anthropology
TL;DR: The definition of appropriate reference samples and of the "population at large," and points out the conceptual differences between them are emphasized, and methods to calculate likelihood ratios for five aspects of the biological profile are demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Effects of Chemical and Heat Maceration Techniques on the Recovery of Nuclear and Mitochondrial DNA from Bone
Dawnie Wolfe Steadman,L B S Lisa DiAntonio,Jeremy J. Wilson,Kevin E. Sheridan,Steven P. Tammariello +4 more
TL;DR: Traditional “conservative” maceration techniques are not necessarily the best methods to yield DNA from skeletal tissue, and treatments performed at high temperatures or for short durations performed best.
Book
Hard Evidence: Case Studies in Forensic Anthropology
TL;DR: Steadman et al. as mentioned in this paper presented a multidisciplinary approach to Human Identification in Homicide Identification: A Case Study from New York, Douglas H. Ubelaker, Mary Jumbelic, Mark Wilson, and E. Mark Levinsohn.