All Stories

  1. Mammalian mitochondrial capture, a tool for rapid screening of DNA preservation in faunal and undiagnostic remains, and its application to Middle Pleistocene specimens from Qesem Cave (Israel)
  2. Tuberculosis origin: The Neolithic scenario
  3. Evolutionary changes in the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the human genome from 9000 years BP until modern times
  4. Lipid biomarkers provide evolutionary signposts for the oldest known cases of tuberculosis
  5. Pattern of maxillary and mandibular proximal enamel thickness at the contact area of the permanent dentition from first molar to first molar
  6. Levantine cranium from Manot Cave (Israel) foreshadows the first European modern humans
  7. A Possible Case of Cherubism in a 17th-Century Korean Mummy
  8. Hyperostotic bone disease in a wombat (Vombatus ursinus)
  9. size, shape, and location of PAFs according to age cohort, gender, and ethnicity
  10. The Plastered Skulls from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Site of Yiftahel (Israel) – A Computed Tomography-Based Analysis
  11. Malocclusion in Early Anatomically Modern Human: A Reflection on the Etiology of Modern Dental Misalignment
  12. Dating the Lower to Middle Paleolithic transition in the Levant: A view from Misliya Cave, Mount Carmel, Israel
  13. Morphological characteristics of the young scoliotic dancer
  14. The value of cadaver CT scans in gross anatomy laboratory
  15. Socioeconomic and Physical Characteristics of Individuals With Degenerative Lumbar Spinal Stenosis
  16. Computed tomography-enhanced anatomy course using enterprise visualization
  17. Musculoskeletal wounds characteristic of the Second Lebanon War
  18. Assyrian Attitude Towards Captive Enemies: A 2700-year-old Paleo-forensic Study
  19. Intracranial volume, cranial thickness, and hyperostosis frontalis interna in the elderly
  20. Dyke–Davidoff–Masson syndrome or fibrous dysplasia: response to a “Letter to the Editor”
  21. Trauma to the Skull: A Historical Perspective from the Southern Levant (4300BCE-1917CE)
  22. Paleopathology in Israel
  23. The arrangement of the interproximal interfaces in the human permanent dentition
  24. Dyke–Davidoff–Masson syndrome in a 6,000-year old skull
  25. Joint Range of Motion and Patellofemoral Pain in Dancers
  26. Extrinsic and intrinsic risk factors associated with injuries in young dancers aged 8–16 years
  27. Internal Stabilization of a Flexion-Distraction Injury of the Upper Cervical Spine of a Toddler
  28. Man the Fat Hunter: The Demise of Homo erectus and the Emergence of a New Hominin Lineage in the Middle Pleistocene (ca. 400 kyr) Levant
  29. Paratenonitis of the Foot and Ankle in Young Female Dancers
  30. Facet Joints Arthrosis in Normal and Stenotic Lumbar Spines
  31. A Case of Dwarfism from the Byzantine City Rehovot-in-the-Negev, Israel
  32. The Epiphyseal Ring
  33. Hyperostosis frontalis interna: What does it tell us about our health?
  34. Injury patterns in young, non-professional dancers
  35. Middle pleistocene dental remains from Qesem Cave (Israel)
  36. Identifying and classifying hyperostosis frontalis interna via computerized tomography
  37. Paleopathology and the origin of agriculture in the Levant
  38. The question of ethnic variability and the Darwinian significance of physiological neonatal jaundice in East Asian populations
  39. Hyperostosis frontalis interna: criteria for sexing and aging a skeleton
  40. Degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis and lumbar spine configuration
  41. Hyperostosis Frontalis Interna and Androgen Suppression
  42. Ligamentum Flavum Thickness in Normal and Stenotic Lumbar Spines
  43. A morphological adaptation of the thoracic and lumbar vertebrae to lumbar hyperlordosis in young and adult females
  44. Schmorl’s nodes distribution in the human spine and its possible etiology
  45. Biomolecular archaeology of ancient tuberculosis: response to “Deficiencies and challenges in the study of ancient tuberculosis DNA” by Wilbur et al. (2009)
  46. Sacral Orientation and Spondylolysis
  47. Spine curve modeling for quantitative analysis of spinal curvature
  48. A Simple Radiological Method for Recognizing Osteoporotic Thoracic Vertebral Compression Fractures and Distinguishing Them From Scheuermann Disease
  49. Demographical Aspects of Schmorl Nodes
  50. Peer-review for the peer-review system
  51. Lumbar Facet and Interfacet Shape Variation During Growth in Children From the General Population
  52. Evidence for a Separate Burial Ground at the Submerged Pottery Neolithic Site of Neve-Yam, Israel
  53. Detection and Molecular Characterization of 9000-Year-Old Mycobacterium tuberculosis from a Neolithic Settlement in the Eastern Mediterranean
  54. Comment on “Holocene tsunamis from Mount Etna and the fate of Israeli Neolithic communities” by Maria Teresa Pareschi, Enzo Boschi, and Massimiliano Favalli
  55. Sacroiliac joint fusion and the implications for manual therapy diagnosis and treatment
  56. Facet Asymmetry in Normal Vertebral Growth
  57. The living and the dead: How do taphonomic processes modify relative abundance and skeletal completeness of freshwater fish?
  58. The Plastered Skulls and Other PPNB Finds from Yiftahel, Lower Galilee (Israel)
  59. Growth and development of female dancers aged 8–16 years
  60. A Re-Evaluation of Burial Customs in the Pre- Pottery Neolithic B in light of Paleodemographic Analysis of the Human Remains from Kfar HaHoresh, Israel
  61. Molecular archaeology: People, animals, and plants of the Holy Land
  62. Abnormalities of the axial and proximal appendicular skeleton in adults with Laron syndrome (growth hormone insensitivity)
  63. Sacral Orientation Revisited
  64. Pelvis Architecture and Urinary Incontinence in Women
  65. Orientation of the human sacrum: Anthropological perspectives and methodological approaches
  66. The Association of Sacroiliac Joint Bridging With Other Enthesopathies in the Human Body
  67. Lumbar Facet Orientation in Spondylolysis: A Skeletal Study
  68. Lumbar facet anatomy changes in spondylolysis: a comparative skeletal study
  69. Comparative skeletal features betweenHomo floresiensis and patients with primary growth hormone insensitivity (Laron syndrome)
  70. Vertebral body shape variation in the thoracic and lumbar spine: Characterization of its asymmetry and wedging
  71. The shape of the neural arch as a causative factor in Isthmic spondylolysis: Characterization and biomechanical implications
  72. Tooth wear and dental pathology at the advent of agriculture: New evidence from the Levant
  73. Sacroiliac Joint Bridging: Simple and Reliable Criteria for Sexing the Skeleton
  74. Sacroiliac Joint Bridging: Demographical and Anatomical Aspects
  75. Facet Tropism and Interfacet Shape in the Thoracolumbar Vertebrae
  76. Two neolithic cases of Hyperostosis frontalis interna
  77. Facet Orientation in the Thoracolumbar Spine
  78. Interrelationship between various aging methods, and their relevance to palaeodemography
  79. Musculoskeletal stress markers in Natufian hunter-gatherers and Neolithic farmers in the Levant: The upper limb
  80. Has the transition to agriculture reshaped the demographic structure of prehistoric populations? New evidence from the Levant
  81. Button osteoma: Its etiology and pathophysiology
  82. Serpens endocrania symmetrica (SES): A new term and a possible clue for identifying intrathoracic disease in skeletal populations
  83. Three-dimensional finite element analysis of the facial skeleton on simulated occlusal loading
  84. Prenatal diagnosis of hypoparathyroidism retardation and dysmorphism (HRD) syndrome
  85. First rib metamorphosis: Its possible utility for human age-at-death estimation
  86. First rib metamorphosis: Its possible utility for human age‐at‐death estimation
  87. Metastatic cancer in the Jurassic
  88. Hyperostosis frontalis interna: An anthropological perspective
  89. Hyperostosis frontalis interna: An anthropological perspective
  90. The elusive diploic veins: Anthropological and anatomical perspective
  91. The elusive diploic veins: Anthropological and anatomical perspective
  92. Mobilizing for Modern War: The Political Economy of American Warfare, 1865-1919by Paul A. C. Koistinen
  93. Mesozoic neoplasia: origins of haemangioma in the Jurassic age
  94. Clues to recognition of fungal origin of lytic skeletal lesions
  95. Clues to recognition of fungal origin of lytic skeletal lesions
  96. Clues potentially distinguishing lytic lesions of multiple myeloma from those of metastatic carcinoma
  97. Clues potentially distinguishing lytic lesions of multiple myeloma from those of metastatic carcinoma
  98. Variation de l'angle sphénoïdal du crâne humain en fonction du vieillissement
  99. Oral bacteria in MioceneSivapithecus
  100. Recognition of sickle cell anemia in skeletal remains of children
  101. Recognition of sickle cell anemia in skeletal remains of children
  102. The elusive petroexoccipital articulation
  103. Why do we fail in aging the skull from the sagittal suture?
  104. Why do we fail in aging the skull from the sagittal suture?
  105. Recognition of leukemia in skeletal remains: Report and comparison of two cases
  106. Identification of childhood arthritis in archaeological material: Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis versus juvenile spondyloarthropathy
  107. Identification of childhood arthritis in archaeological material: Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis versus juvenile spondyloarthropathy
  108. Size and location of the human temporomandibular joint
  109. Size and location of the human temporomandibular joint
  110. Factors Affecting the Rate and Pattern of the First Costal Cartilage Ossification
  111. Injuries to the skeleton due to prolonged activity in hand-to-hand combat
  112. Remedy for an 8500 year-old plastered human skull from Kfar Hahoresh, Israel
  113. Origin of yaws in the Pleistocene
  114. Ohalo II H2: A 19,000-year-old skeleton from a water-logged site at the Sea of Galilee, Israel
  115. Palaeopathology at the Khan-el-Ahmar site: Health and disease in a Byzantine monastery in the Judean Desert, Israel
  116. Reliability of reliability coefficients in the estimation of asymmetry
  117. The Pre-Pottery Neolithic populations of South Sinai and their relations to other circum-mediterranean groups : an anthropological study
  118. Ohalo II man—unusual findings in the anterior rib cage and shoulder girdle of a 19000-year-old specimen
  119. Variables affecting dental fluctuating asymmetry in human isolates
  120. Leprosy or madura foot? The ambiguous nature of infectious disease in paleopathology: Reply to Dr. Manchester
  121. Atlit-Yam: A Prehistoric Site on the Sea Floor off the Israeli Coast
  122. Atlit-Yam: A Prehistoric Site on the Sea Floor off the Israeli Coast
  123. Unusual pathological condition in the lower extremities of a skeleton from ancient Israel
  124. Craniofacial asymmetry in Bedouin adults
  125. New Subsistence Data and Human Remains from the Earliest Levantine Epipalaeolithic
  126. Medicoritual Trephinations in Modern Israel
  127. Possible congenital hemolytic anemia in prehistoric coastal inhabitants of Israel
  128. The first identified case of thalassemia?
  129. The morphological significance of the Homo I Skeleton from the PPNB submerged site at Atlit-Yam, Israel
  130. Efficiency of cranial bilateral measurements in separating human populations
  131. 8000 year-old human remains on the sea floor near Atlit, Israel
  132. Cremation, Its Practice and Identification: A Case Study from the Roman Period
  133. Cremation, Its Practice and Identification: A Case Study from the Roman Period
  134. Cranial deformation and trephination in the Middle East
  135. Human Burials from Horvat Galil : A Pre-Pottery Neolithic Site in the Upper Galilee, Israel
  136. The dermatoglyphic characteristics of two isolated Bedouin groups from South Sinai
  137. Neolithic skeletal remains at Yiftahel, Area C (Israel)
  138. Observations on crania of bedouin children, by age group
  139. The Relationship betweenNawamisEntrance Orientations and Sunset Direction
  140. The Relationship between Nawamis Entrance Orientations and Sunset Direction
  141. A new method for reconstitution of highly fusogenic sendai virus envelopes
  142. Biocultural adaptation of cauterization in South Sinai Bedouin tribes
  143. Migration and biological isolation of human populations influencing range and variation of metric and non-metric traits of the skull and mandible
  144. Metric and non-metric variation in three isolated bedouin populations of the negev and South Sinai deserts
  145. The Orientation ofNawamisEntrances in Southern Sinai: Expressions of Religious Belief and Seasonality?
  146. The Orientation of Nawamis Entrances in Southern Sinai: Expressions of Religious Belief and Seasonality?
  147. Coxa Vara in a Chalcolithic Population from the Sinai
  148. Demographic, Biological and Cultural Aspects of the Neolithic Revolution: A View from the Southern Levant