00:01
All right, students, welcome to this question here, and you're trying to compare the male, you know, and the female skull, all right? like, skeletonized individuals, how can you tell a male from a female? so these are just extracted very important illustrations here, you know, that you can tell visible differences between the male and the female skulls.
00:34
And the label, you know, a to probably f.
00:45
Very important differences here.
00:49
We can start by illustrating or let me say, we can start off by a.
00:56
So this is differences between the male and the female skulls, or let me say skeletons.
01:16
So a will look at the male cranial.
01:22
So a, okay, let me say in this case, a is cranial mass, okay? so you'll notice that the male cranial mass, all right? it would be more like a block and so massive, okay, as compared to the females, which would be, you know, it appears.
02:02
So this is blocky, the blocky nature is what you're looking at.
02:06
But the females more round.
02:09
Okay, so you can say males and you can say females.
02:19
So we can do this comparison, kind of a touch.
02:29
So you can say for cranial, you can say the males have this blocky structure and the females have these more round, so you can say a rounder, and maybe tapered.
02:44
And if you're more move to b, b is a very interesting structure, orbits, or let me say sockets, eye sockets, and you're looking at the females having a sharper margins, and the males will have this round and dull.
03:22
I hope you can pick that from the diagram.
03:25
The c feature, you probably want to look at is a zygomatic bone.
03:34
The c, okay, this structure here, and it's more pronounced in the male skull.
03:54
So we can say less pronounced in females.
04:03
Then the d is the mandible or females more rounded, you know, than the male.
04:09
So we're looking at d, the mandible, and we are looking at differences in the roundedness...