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1 March 2002 Statistical nonparametric methods for the study of fossil populations
Hervé Monchot, Jacques Léchelle
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Abstract

The precise knowledge of the number and nature of the species belonging to a fossil assemblage as well as of the structure of each species (e.g., age, sex) is of great importance in paleontology. Mixture analysis based on the method of maximum likelihood is a modern statistical technique that concerns the problem of samples consisting of several components, the composition of which is not known. Nonparametric bootstrap and jackknife techniques are used to calculate a confidence interval for each estimated parameter (prior probability, mean, standard deviation) of each group. The bootstrap method is also used to evaluate mathematically how many groups are present in a sample. Experimental density smoothing using the kernel method appears to be a better solution than the use of histograms for the estimation of a distribution. This paper presents some basic concepts and procedures and discusses some preliminary results concerning sex ratios and mortality profile assessments using bones and tooth metric data of small (Ovis antiqua) and large (Bos primigenius) bovines from European Pleistocene sites.

Hervé Monchot and Jacques Léchelle "Statistical nonparametric methods for the study of fossil populations," Paleobiology 28(1), 55-69, (1 March 2002). https://doi.org/10.1666/0094-8373(2002)028<0055:SNMFTS>2.0.CO;2
Accepted: 1 September 2001; Published: 1 March 2002
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