María Clara López-Sosa

María Clara López-Sosa
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María verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
Verified
María verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • Master of Science
  • PhD Student at University of Bonn

About

6
Publications
2,510
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10
Citations
Current institution
University of Bonn
Current position
  • PhD Student

Publications

Publications (6)
Article
Full-text available
El objetivo de este trabajo es realizar un análisis comparativo de la morfología craneofacial en una muestra de 120 individuos del Holoceno temprano proveniente de Sudamérica y Norteamérica con el propósito de discutir tanto la diversidad biológica que presentaban las primeras poblaciones que llegaron al continente, como sus dinámicas de expansión....
Article
Full-text available
The biological variation of the earliest skeletons of South America has been intensely debated for the last two centuries. One of the major research constraints has been the limited number of available samples dating to the early Holocene. We here present the first direct radiocarbon-date for the early Holocene human skeleton from Toca dos Coqueiro...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
The biological variation of the earliest humans in South America provides clues on the evolutionary processes by which the continent was occupied. We evaluated the craniometric variation of the first direct radiocarbon-dated early Holocene human skeleton from Serra da Capivara. This individual, also known as “Zuzú”, comes from the burial 1 of Toca...
Poster
Full-text available
The biological variation of the earliest humans in South America provides clues on the evolutionary processes by which the continent was occupied. We evaluated the craniometric variation of the first direct radiocarbon-dated early Holocene human skeleton from Serra da Capivara. This individual, also known as “Zuzú”, comes from the burial 1 of Toca...
Preprint
Full-text available
The biological variation of the earliest skeletons of South America has been intensely debated for the last two centuries. One of the major research constraints has been the limited number of available samples dating to the early Holocene. We here present the first direct radiocarbon-date for the early Holocene human skeleton from Toca dos Coqueiro...

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