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One of the biggest struggles of biological anthropology is to estimate the biological profile from burned human skeletal remains. Bioanthropological methods are seriously compromised due to bone heat-induced alterations in shape and size. Therefore, it is urgent to improve our ability to estimate sex, age at death, stature, and ancestrality, to recognize peri mortem traumas and differentiate them from fractures due to fire, and to determine what was the intensity of burning, namely maximum temperature and heat exposure length. This review focuses on different methodologies to assess heat prompted changes in bone submicrostructure. Some of these are extensively used in burned bones research, namely infrared and Raman spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction, while others such as neutron spectroscopy and diffraction are rarely applied to bone samples although their contribution may be crucial for establishing new bioanthropological methods for a reliable examination of burned victims.

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Acknowledgment

The authors acknowledge the financial support from the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology – UID/MULTI/00070/2013; SFRH/BPD/84268/2012 and PTDC/IVC-ANT/1201/2014. The authors especially acknowledge Prof. J.C. Otero (University of Málaga, Spain) and Prof. F.P.S.C. Gil (University of Coimbra, Portugal).