Hopefully pretty well. Osteologists study the structures and functions of bones. Osteologists are fairly useful people. An osteologist can tell you how old, the gender, the race, the general health, the height, and weight of someone just by looking at their bone structure. An osteologist can tell if you got a lot of sunlight or Vitamin D in your diet by looking at your bones. Their studies help to recognize structural differences in every kind of bone too, not just human bones and their research helps in furthering anthropological studies, crime solving techniques, archealogical findings can be better understood and modern medical developments and treatment techniques.
Yes
osteologist
An anthropologist or an osteologist is a person who studies bones. They analyze skeletal remains to understand the cultural and biological history of a population.
My grandfather was an osteologist "back in the day." He went on digs with the famous Leaky couple (archeologists), and assembled the bones. He worked for the Museum of Natural History, putting together bones that archeologists dug up, to create the creatures you see in the museum today. One of his most famous pieces was the Great Auk, a bird that became extinct in the mid 19th century. So, osteologists also put bones together, and "fill in the gaps" for archeologists who dig them up. Kind of a simplistic answer, but it's another phase of the profession.
A person who studies human bones may be known as an Osteologist. Physical anthropologists may also study human bones. People who study animal bones from archaeological sites are known as zooarchaeologists.
Forensic osteologists can earn an average salary of around $75,000 to $100,000 per year in the United States. However, salaries can vary depending on factors such as experience, location, and employer.
an archaeologist, a palentologist, or an osteologist , depending on if you mean fossils or a broken body partIt depends on why they are looking at the bones. If you are talking about the character Temperence "Bones" Brennan, she is a cultural anthropologist, she is brought in to help identify where a person might've been from so they can solve crimes.
will become, shall become, (am/are/is) going to become,
The past participle of become is also have or has become. She has become a better person.
The future perfect tense of "become" is "will have become."
Has become. The 3rd person singular (he, she, it) uses 'has become.' The other persons of the conjugation use 'have become.' He has become class president. She has become homecoming princess. It has become time to go. 'Become' is the correct participial form of the verb; is become, has become, had become, might have become, will become, etc. 'Became' is the simple past tense conjugation of the verb, and is never used as the participle.
(I, We, You, They) become. (He, She, It) becomes.