Understanding the microbial biogeography of ancient human dentitions to guide study design and interpretation
Andrew Ozga
Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons
Works by Andrew T. Ozga in Social and Behavioral Sciences
2022
2019
"The dead shall be raised": Multidisciplinary analysis of human skeletons reveals complexity in 19th century immigrant socioeconomic history and identity in New Haven, Connecticut
Andrew Ozga
Biogeographic Study of Human Gut Associated crAssphage Suggests Impacts from Industrialization and Recent Expansion
Andrew Ozga
An analysis of the methods and purposes of post-mortem examinations as observed in a pauper cemetery
Andrew Ozga
Chimpanzees of the Past: Full Mitochondrial Genomes from Pan Troglodytes schweinfurthii Skeletons from Gombe National Park
Andrew Ozga
Adventures in Museuomics: The Use of Next Generation Sequencing to Uncover Great Ape Host and Microbial Genomes
Andrew Ozga
Long-Term Genetic Stability and a High Altitude East Asian Origin for the Peoples of the High Valleys of the Himalayan Arc
Andrew Ozga
Comparison of aDNA Yields from Calculus and Tooth Roots in Pre-Columbian Skeletal Remains
Andrew Ozga
New Insights into Turkey Domestication in the Mimbres Valley using Mitochondrial DNA Analysis
Andrew Ozga
The prevalence of vertebral and peripheral characteristics of diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) in a late nineteenth and early twentieth century Almshouse cemetery
Andrew Ozga
Noninvasive Genomics of Gombe Chimpanzees: Evaluating Methods for Wild Primate Populations Genomics
Andrew Ozga
Profiles of Microbial Diversity and Function with Museum Dental Calculus Samples Extracted from Wild Great Apes
Andrew Ozga
Chapter 6: Genetic and Microscopic Analysis of Human Dental Calculus from Swift Water Place
Biology Faculty Books and Book Chapters
New Insights into Turkey Domestication in the Mimbres Valley using Mitochondrial DNA Analysis
Biology Faculty Proceedings, Presentations, Speeches, Lectures
2018
2017
2016
Oral microbiome diversity among Cheyenne and Arapaho individuals from Oklahoma
Biology Faculty Articles