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Erin H. Kimmerle

Researcher at University of South Florida

Publications -  25
Citations -  1274

Erin H. Kimmerle is an academic researcher from University of South Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Forensic anthropology. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 25 publications receiving 1134 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual Dimorphism in America: Geometric Morphometric Analysis of the Craniofacial Region*

TL;DR: The consistency between American groups is interesting as it suggests that population differences in sexual dimorphism may result more from human variation in size than allometric variation in craniofacial morphology.
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Estimation and Evidence in Forensic Anthropology : Age-at-Death

TL;DR: This article presents a statistical analysis of a large data set of pubic symphyseal scores from multiple contexts, including anatomical collections, war dead, and victims of genocide, in order to find statistical methods that will have the correct “coverage.”
Book

Skeletal Trauma: Identification of Injuries Resulting from Human Rights Abuse and Armed Conflict

TL;DR: An epidemiological approach to forensic investigations of violations to International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law International Law and Forensics An Epidemiological Framework for Trauma Analysis Case Study: Estimating War Crimes from the Wounded to Killed Ratio: The Japanese Embassy, C.C. Snow, J.P. Baraybar, and H.R. Spirer Differential Diagnosis of Skeletal Trauma Reconstructing Skeletal Fractures to Identify Trauma The Anthroposcopic Examination of skeletons Injuries Ruling Out Skeletal Variation and Skeletal Pathology Classification of Fract
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A new method for estimating age-at-death from the first rib.

TL;DR: Age-at-death estimates generated from 50 and 95% posterior density regions indicate that this method captures age-related change reaching the ninth decade and produces results highly correlated with age in other samples and its applicability to females.
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Analysis of Age‐at‐Death Estimation Through the Use of Pubic Symphyseal Data*

TL;DR: The question of whether age parameters derived from an American population will reliably estimate age‐at‐death for East European skeletal populations is important since the ability to accurately estimate an individual’s age‐ at‐death hinges on what standard is used.