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Boyer diss 2009 1046..

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spine at the superior tip of the iliac blade. This crest thus separates the gluteal surface of<br />

the iliac crest (posteriorly) from the iliacus surface (George, 1977). Starting at the<br />

posterior inferior iliac spine the gluteal surface becomes anteroposteriorly wider as it is<br />

followed to the superior margin of the blade, while the iliacus surface actually narrows<br />

slightly.<br />

The lunate facet of the acetabulum is typical in its form with a gap that opens<br />

anteroinferiorly toward the obturator foramen. The sutures between the different bones of<br />

the innominate are barely visible, but it can be seen that the ischium forms the longest arc<br />

of the lunate facet (~10.5 mm), the ilium continues the facet for a slightly shorter distance<br />

(~9.7 mm), and the pubis has the shortest contribution (~6.1 mm). The acetabulum<br />

appears to have fairly shallow margins. Cranial (or superior) buttressing of the<br />

acetabulum is evident. The anteroposterior dimension of the acetabulum is roughly equal<br />

to its superoinferior dimension. Therefore the acetabulum has a circular, rather than<br />

elliptical outline.<br />

The superior pubic ramus forms an angle of ~150º with the ilium. Its anterior<br />

margin is slightly convex at the level of the acetabulum. At the apex of this convexity, the<br />

ramus flares mediolaterally, creating a broad attachment area for the pectineus muscle<br />

that is ~13 mm long, or a little less than two-thirds the total length of the superior pubic<br />

ramus. A ridge projects anteriorly from the inferior margin of the pubic portion of the<br />

acetabulum and then arcs inferiorly to follow the pubic ramus. The external surface of the<br />

ramus is concave posterior to this ridge. This ridge forms a rim to a depression encircling<br />

the obturator foramen. The obturator externus muscle likely occupied this depression.<br />

327

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