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Stable Isotopes and Oral Tori in Greenlandic Norse and Inuit
M. Baumann,
N. Lynnerup
, G. R. Scott
*
*
Corresponding author for this work
Department of Forensic Medicine
Section of Forensic Pathology
2
Citations (Scopus)
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Keyphrases
Inuit
100%
Greenlandic
100%
Stable Isotopes
100%
New-onset Refractory Status Epilepticus (NORSE)
100%
Stable Isotope Ratios
28%
Environmental Factors
28%
Etiology
14%
High-fat Diet
14%
Isotope Composition
14%
Stable Nitrogen Isotopes
14%
High Protein
14%
Relative Degree
14%
Scandinavian
14%
Palatine
14%
Protein Intake
14%
Greenlandic Inuit
14%
Influence Factors
14%
Marine Proteins
14%
Stable Carbon Isotope Ratio
14%
European Population
14%
Anthropologists
14%
Relative Role
14%
Marine Resources
14%
Genetic Factors
14%
Nitrogen Isotope Ratio
14%
Bone Development
14%
Torus
14%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Environmental Factor
100%
High Fat Food
50%
Marine Resources
50%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Bone Development
100%
Genetics
100%
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Stable Isotope
100%
Carbon 14
25%
Marine Resource
25%
Nitrogen 15
25%