Archaeologists in England are currently puzzling over a 2,000-year-old comb that was carved from the back of a human skull. The comb's teeth show no signs of wear, so they don't believe it was used as ...
The team, led by Giuseppe Intini, a bone biologist at the University of Pittsburgh, first compared the cell composition of the calvarial suture—which joins the bilateral bones in the roof of the skull ...
[3] Figure 1 illustrates the boney anatomy of the normal skull sutures and fontanelles ... typically closes by 2 to 3 months of life. Normal human cranial shapes vary; a combination of genetic ...