Volume 56, Issue 5 pp. 1324-1327
CASE REPORT
ANTHROPOLOGY

The Anatomical Diaspora: Evidence of Early American Anatomical Traditions in North Dakota

Phoebe R. Stubblefield Ph.D.

Phoebe R. Stubblefield Ph.D.

Department of Anthropology, University of North Dakota, 236 Centennial Dr Stop 8374, Grand Forks, ND.

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First published: 30 March 2011
Citations: 2
Additional information and reprint requests:
Phoebe R. Stubblefield, Ph.D.
Department of Anthropology
University of North Dakota
236 Centennial Dr Stop 8374
Grand Forks, ND 58202
E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Abstract: The current focus in forensic anthropology on increasing scientific certainty in ancestry determination reinforces the need to examine the ancestry of skeletal remains used for osteology instruction. Human skeletal remains were discovered on the University of North Dakota campus in 2007. After recovery, the osteological examination resulted in a profile for a 33- to 46-year-old woman of African descent with stature ranging from 56.3 to 61.0 in. The pattern of postmortem damage indicated that the remains had been prepared for use as an anatomical teaching specimen. Review of the American history of anatomical teaching revealed a preference for Black subjects, which apparently extended to states like North Dakota despite extremely low resident populations of people of African descent. This study emphasizes the need to examine the ancestry of older teaching specimens that lack provenience, rather than assuming they are derived from typical (i.e., Indian) sources of anatomical material.

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