Homo-Journal of Comparative Human Biology

Papers
(The median citation count of Homo-Journal of Comparative Human Biology is 1. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-07-01 to 2025-07-01.)
ArticleCitations
Sexing the sternal rib end in modern Greeks: A virtual osteometric approach using high-resolution 3D surface models6
Tarsal metric trends over the Medieval-Post-Medieval transition in London5
Age-at-death standards for Mesoamerican Prehispanic and colonial infant, child, and juvenile skeletons5
The relationship between the position of the spine in the sagittal plane and longitudinal arching of the feet in school-age girls and boys – cross-sectional study4
Postnatal changes of the human bony labyrinth morphology3
Editorial3
Sex- and site-specific, age-related changes in bone density – a Terry collection study3
Evidence of lead poisoning and the co-occurrence of metabolic disease in Archaic/Early Classical (6th–5th century BCE) Laurion, Greece2
Teeth macroabrasion for determination of dental age and diet in the Illyrian population from the Kopila necropolis on the Island of Korčula, Croatia2
The effects of orthopedic pathological conditions and systemic diseases on the prevalence of hip osteoarthritis in Modern African- and European-Americans2
Qafzeh 9 Early Modern Human from Southwest Asia: age at death and sex estimation re-assessed1
Morphometric data and the size factor: examining the problem using the pelvis1
VDR polymorphisms effect on bone mineral density in Polish postmenopausal women1
Metastatic carcinoma in human remains from TT110, Luxor, Egypt (ancient Thebes)1
Inferences on mobility and subsistence patterns from degenerative joint disease and entheseal changes. Trends in the farmer/forager border (Central-Western Argentina)1
Somatotype and body composition profiles of children and adolescent male basketball players1
Breathing time: a longue-durée multidisciplinary study of respiratory illnesses and airborne diseases in Switzerland (16th–21st century CE)1
Flat feet occurrence among young school-age children and its association with body mass index values1
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