Academic literature on the topic 'Teeth Teeth Teeth Dental anthropology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Teeth Teeth Teeth Dental anthropology"

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Spencer, Mark. "Dental functional morphology: How teeth work." American Journal of Human Biology 17, no. 3 (2005): 384–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.20115.

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Sperber, Geoffrey H. "The Genetics of Odontogenesis: Implications in Dental Anthropology and Palæo-Odontology." Dental Anthropology Journal 17, no. 1 (2018): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.26575/daj.v17i1.138.

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Palaeoanthropology and forensic odontology rely significantly upon detailed dental morphology that is ultimately the phenotypic expression of the underlying genotype and developmental phenomena. Odontogenesis is the consequence of a complex series of molecular interactions controlled by epigenetic signals acting on embryonic epithelial-mesenchymal tissues of ectodermal, neural crest and mesodermal origin. Of the estimated 24,847 genes of the human genome (Pearson, 2003) some 200 or more genes have been directly or indirectly involved in tooth development (http://bite-it.helsinki.fi). The loci of these genes on the 22 pairs of autosomes and the pair of sex chromosomes are being identified by their mutations that give rise to phenotypic dental abnormalities. The sequential cascades of stages from initiation through the bud, cap, bell, mineralization, root formation and eruption of teeth are all under genetic control but subject to environmental influences. Identification of specific genes with clinical phenotypes provides invaluable clues to familial, racial and evolutionary affinities, all of jurisprudential, heredity and evolutionary significance to odontologists. Combining the genetics of odontogenesis with forensic evidence and palaeoanthropological fossil data provides an unparalled source of information on heredity, environmental and evolutionary events through teeth, the most durable of all biological structures after death. It is paradoxical that teeth are most susceptible to decay during life, but postmortem are the last structures to disintegrate. Teeth truly tell tales of the living and the dead.
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Dudás, Csaba, Bernadette Kerekes-Máthé, Mária Henrietta Gábor, I. Krisztina Mártha, and Szilárd Sándor Gál. "Fogak morfológiai és metrikus jellegzetességeinek vizsgálata marosvásárhelyi középkori leleteken és a jelenkori helyi populáció körében." Orvosi Hetilap 159, no. 30 (2018): 1235–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/650.2018.31102.

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Abstract: Introduction: Teeth, as an integral part of human organism, are not exceptions from the physical anthropology changes caused by biological evolution and the way of living. Different stress factors and the natural selection are contributing to the emphasis of certain morphological characteristics. Aim: Comparison of dental metric characteristics and the presence of accessory tooth cusps between human remains from the Middle Ages and dental study models of today’s patients. Material and method: Morphological characteristics of 132 teeth from 19 skulls and 694 teeth on dental models of 30 patients were examined. The mesiodistal, incisivocervical and buccolingual diameters of crowns were measured by a validated 2D image analysis method. Carabelli and talon cusps were also examined using a magnifying glass. Results: Statistically significant differences between the size of the 14th-century and the present-day teeth were found in some of the teeth groups. In medieval artifacts, lateral teeth had smaller crown width than teeth measured in the contemporary population. The Carabelli cusps found in the archeological human remains belonged to grades 1 and 3 on Dahlberg scale (23.07%), while the Carabelli cusps observed in the contemporary group belonged to grades 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 (50.90%). Talon cusp occurred only once in the contemporary group. Conclusion: In case of the contemporary teeth, the Carabelli cusps appeared in a more pronounced morphological form and with a higher frequency, which emphasizes the European origin of today’s population. Orv Hetil. 2018; 159(30): 1235–1240.
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Agrawal, Nitin Kumar, Lucina Hackman, and Samarika Dahal. "Dental Age Assessment using Demirjian’s Eight Teeth Method and Willems Method in a Tertiary Hospital." Journal of Nepal Medical Association 56, no. 214 (2018): 912–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.31729/jnma.3876.

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Introduction: Age estimation is an important aspect in forensic anthropology, as it can aid in the identification of the deceased, and can be used in cases of immigration, child abuse and criminal prosecution in living individuals. Dental age estimation is considered reliable and accurate, since tooth development is least affected by environmental factors compared to somatic growth.Methods: In total, 150 pre-orthodontic treatment radiographs from healthy individuals were assessed. These individuals were aged between 8 to 19 years. Dental age for these individuals was calculated by two methods: Demirjian’s eight teeth method and Willems method. For Willems method, seven teeth on the left side of mandible (except the third molar) were staged according to Demirjian’s staging, and for Demirjian’s eight teeth method, all eight teeth were staged.Results: The mean chronological ages were 13.6961±1.94384 years in males and 13.9204±2.63541 years in females. The mean estimated ages by Demirjian’s eight teeth method were 12.1856±1.73478 years and 11.7906±2.32344 years in males and females respectively. Similarly, the mean estimated ages by Willems method were 12.8958±1.46838 years in males and 12.6926±2.27807 years in females.Conclusions: Willems method and Demirjian’s eight teeth method underestimated the chronological age in the given population. Both methods showed excellent correlation with chronological age indicating their applicability in dental age estimation, with development of population specific scores.
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Nayak, Ramakant, Vijayalakshmi Kotrashetti, Aarati Nayak, et al. "Maxillary and Mandibular First Premolars Showing Three-Cusp Pattern: An Unusual Presentation." Case Reports in Dentistry 2013 (2013): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/734143.

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Dental anatomy is the study of morphology of various teeth in human dentitions. The application of dental anatomy in clinical practice is important, and dentist should have a thorough knowledge regarding the morphology of the teeth. At times as a result of genetic variation, environmental factors, diet of an individual and race, variations in the morphology of the teeth can be observed. These variations have been extensively studied by the researcher in the field of anthropology to define a particular race. The most commonly observed changes include peg-shaped laterals, shovel-shaped incisors, and extra cusp on molar. Common variations documented with regard to maxillary and mandibular first premolars are the variation in the number of roots. But the variations with respect to crown morphology are few. We report a first documented unusual presentation of maxillary and mandibular first premolars with three-cusps pattern in a female patient.
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Kageyama, Ikuo, and Shintaro Kondo. "Introduction to the Proceedings of the Symposium, “Deciduous Teeth in Dental Anthropology”." Anthropological Science 110, no. 4 (2002): 333–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1537/ase.110.333.

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Tomczyk, Jacek, Paweł Rusin, and Marta Zalewska. "Prevalence of dental caries in the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age populations from Żerniki Górne (Poland)." Anthropological Review 84, no. 2 (2021): 201–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/anre-2021-0016.

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Abstract The aim of the studies is to describe the prevalence and distribution of dental caries in two populations from Żerniki Górne (Poland). The first population represented the Corded Ware Culture (CWC) (2550–2350 BC), and the second population belonged to the Trzciniec Culture (TC) (1300–1000 BC). While the TC is identified with a typically agricultural strategy, the CWC culture strategy is still debatable. Two types of strategies are indicated in the CWC, either a mixed or typical agricultural economy. A total of 110 adults were examined, of which 29 represented the CWC and 81 belonged to the TC. A total of 1132 permanent teeth were examined (CWC 379, TC 753). Of the 110 individuals, 54 individuals had dental caries (CWC 19/29, 66%; TC 35/81, 43%). In the CWC, 68% (13/19) of males and 60% (6/10) of females had dental caries. In the younger period (TC), the percentage of dental caries among males was little higher (45%) than among females (41%). Dental caries was identified in 13% (50/379) of the teeth from the CWC. In the TC, the percentage of affected teeth were similar (11%, 82/753). The most common location of caries in all the chronological periods were the approximal and cemento-enamel junction [CEJ] surfaces. Caries on the occlusal surface was much less frequent. If we assume that an important cause of the development of dental caries is a high-carbohydrate diet, we can conclude that a similar prevalence of teeth affected by caries and it locations indicate a similar management strategy in both populations.
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Żądzińska, Elżbieta, Beata Lubowiedzka, and Magdalena Wochna-Sobańska. "Morphology of dentition in Polish children with trisomy 21 (Down syndrome)." Anthropological Review 73, no. 1 (2010): 47–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10044-010-0001-4.

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Morphology of dentition in Polish children with trisomy 21 (Down syndrome)This paper compares the dimensions and non-metric dental traits between Down syndrome patients (DS) and a control group. A total of 1,210 teeth of subjects with Down syndrome (diagnosed as regular trisomy 21 type) were analyzed. The mesiodistal (MD) and labiolingual or buccolingual (BL) diameters of each dental crown were measured, and the selected non-metric dental traits evaluated. The teeth of male and female DS patients were found to have lower values of both measurements compared to controls (excepting for the mesiodistal diameter of the lower mandibular premolar both in males and females). Sexual dimorphism of dental crown dimensions characteristic of contemporary human populations (the highest M-F difference was lower than 6%) was also observed: boys' teeth, particularly canines, are bigger than girls' (2.33 on average). Disorders in maxillary tooth alignment and the faint shoveling of upper central incisors (grade 1 according to ASU scale) were noted significantly more often among Down syndrome patients, but descriptive features correlating with dental crown size were observed more rarely (e.g., the distal accessory ridge on the upper canine and tuberculum Carabelli on the first molar).
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Djuric, Marija, Zoran Rakocevic, and Nenad Rankovic. "Age assessment at the time of death based on panoramic radiography." Vojnosanitetski pregled 62, no. 7-8 (2005): 557–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/vsp0508557d.

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Background. The determination of age at the time of death is an important method in forensic anthropology and paleodemography. The possible postmortem investigation of the teeth and jaws enables the determination of age at the time of death, as the bones and teeth are both resistant to degradation in soil and characterized by age-related morphological changes. The aim of this study was to determine whether the age-related changes visible on panoramic radiography correlated with age, and enabled the assessment of individual age. Methods. Seven radiographic parameters were used in the study: tooth loss, occlusal tooth wear, pulp stones, carious teeth, periapical disease, tooth restoration, and alveolar bone loss associated with periodontal disease. Results. The material comprised 314 dental panoramic tomograms of living patients of both sexes with documented age (18 to 77 years). Multiple regression equations were constructed for the age estimation, including four parameters (the number of missing teeth, the number of intact teeth, the distance of cement-enamel junction from the alveolar ridge, the number of abraded teeth). The nature of data treated by regression analysis required the careful choice of parameters, appropriate functional model for each parameter, and the experience of the investigator. With the four parameters included in equations, the error was ? 2.55 years. Conclusion. This preliminary analysis showed that the conventional regression technique could be appropriate for the age estimation based on panoramic radiography, and that an additional study with a larger sample and on wider population was required.
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Gaboutchian, A. V., V. A. Knyaz, S. V. Vasilyev, D. V. Korost, and A. A. Kudaev. "ORIENTATION VS. ORIENTATION: IMAGE PROCESSING FOR STUDIES OF DENTAL MORPHOLOGY." International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLIII-B2-2021 (June 28, 2021): 723–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xliii-b2-2021-723-2021.

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Abstract. Many odontological studies held through application of traditional and modern techniques, especially when related to measurements and morphology, very much depend on methodological aspects referred to orientation of teeth. And this is particularly relevant to new imaging and 3d reconstruction implemented in dental research and practice in a wide range of disciplines from anthropology to dentistry. The current paper deals with studies of palaeoanthropological findings dating back to the Upper Palaeolithic period in Central Russia – well-known archaeological site of Sunghir. Micro-computed tomography has been used for digital reconstructions of teeth – molars and premolars representing well-preserved dental morphology of an adolescent individual. This is due to new opportunities introduced by 3d reconstruction techniques in general and high-resolution x-ray imaging in particular that this study has become relevant. Thus digital techniques do not only provide for operating convenience but, which is even more important, allow application of image processing algorithms. In the suggested methodology these are automated, based on morphological interpretations and serve for orientation of studied teeth for further measurements. At the same time micro-computed tomographic imaging allows accurate reconstruction of other morphologically important structures which are used for an alternative orientation algorithm. Comparisons of dental measurements’ results obtained through automated digital odontometry (aDo) after both orientations applied are presented in the current paper.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Teeth Teeth Teeth Dental anthropology"

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Dempsey, Paula Jane. "Genetic and environmental contributions to morphological variation in the human permanent dentition : a study of Australian twins." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1998. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phd389.pdf.

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Bibliography: leaves 348-366. Elucidates the nature and extent of genetic and environmental contributions to variation in permanent tooth crown size. Sibling correlations are compared to find evidence of sex-linked genes contributing to crown size. This hypothesis was tested by comparing mean tooth size in female-male opposite-sex twins with same-sex twins, and singletons.
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McVeigh, Clare. "Variability in human tooth formation : a comparison of four groups of close biological affinity /." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/NQ66224.pdf.

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Cooper, Kayleigh Anne. "The physical characterisation and composition of archaeological dental calculus." Thesis, Cranfield University, 2017. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/12817.

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Dental calculus is a complex biological material that has been found to provide significant evidence of past population diet, health and habitual activity. It is composed of mineral phases, trace elements, organic species and can have inclusions such as starch granules and microfossils incorporated into its structure. This composition has been found to vary among individuals, although the reasons for this are poorly understood. Despite this, there is a wealth of knowledge that can be gained from analysing this biomineral, especially from archaeological remains. In past populations, the variables that affect composition, such as pharmaceuticals and diet are reduced compared to modern populations. As such the reliance on clinical studies that have investigated dental calculus from modern individuals, may be flawed when considering past populations. The focus of this study was to provide insight about the variation in physical characterisation and composition of archaeological dental calculus. Despite there being an abundance of archaeological dental calculus research, this is the first large scale compositional study of specimens from three separate past populations. In addition, this research is the first study to adopt a non-destructive to destructive approach to archaeological dental calculus analysis. As well, it is the first application of nanocomputed tomography to dental calculus from past populations. Consequently, this study demonstrates the first evidence of accumulation layering that has been detected using non- estructive nano-computed tomography. Furthermore, this research has identified three types of layering in archaeological dental calculus. Due to these findings, it is expected that this research will impact the future of dental calculus analysis, especially when considering dental calculus as a method of mapping an individual’s health, diet or lifestyle in the weeks or months prior to death. The overall results of this thesis demonstrate that some aspects of the morphological, mineralogical and elemental analysis of archaeological dental calculus are inconsistent with clinical literature. The results have also shown that there are some differences between the dental calculus from different archaeological populations which can be related to post-mortem burial conditions.
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MacDonald, Rachel Margaret. "In the teeth of the problem : dental anthropology and the reconstruction of African dietary regimes." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.313588.

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Stephen, Soni. "Dental age determination in South Australian children : thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Dental Surgery /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1999. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09DM/09dms831.pdf.

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Martin, Sarah Abigail. "Expression of fluctuating asymmetry in primate teeth: Analyzing the role of growth duration." The Ohio State University, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1366187797.

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Veneziano, A. "Big brains and small teeth : a primate comparative approach to dental and mandibular reduction in hominins." Thesis, Liverpool John Moores University, 2017. http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/7451/.

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Within the genus Homo, we observe a decrease in mandibular robusticity and in the size of anterior and postcanine dentition, a trend that is usually referred to as reduction or gracilisation. Factors linked to diet, food processing and encephalization have been suggested to be the main drivers of this trend. Stone tools and fire would have allowed Pleistocene hominins to reduce food toughness, thus relaxing the selective pressures on the masticatory apparatus. In the Holocene, the changes in human lifestyle triggered by agriculture would have determined the reduction in human tooth size. Brain expansion may have acted as a constraint on the development of the lower jaw. In this work, a primate perspective was adopted to clarify the relative influence of adaptive and non-adaptive factors on mandibular and dental reduction in the genus Homo. The effect of diet and structural constraints (allometry and encephalization) on dental and mandibular size and robusticity were analysed. The results show that incisor size and mandibular robusticity correlate significantly with diet proxies in non-human extant catarrhines and with neurocranium shape changes in the neurocranium in Homo sapiens. In non-human African apes, the elongation of the neurocranium influences postcanine tooth size. In Homo, body size plays an important part in tooth size allometry, but not in robusticity. These results suggest that improvements in tool-based food preparation may have been a leading factor in the reduction of incisor size in hominins. Molars and premolars were probably influenced by the expansion of the neurocranium during Pleistocene, and incisor size may be constrained by neurocranium shape changes in H. sapiens. This work confirmed the importance of food processing in the trend of reduction and produced convincing evidence for the significance of structural constraints in the evolution of the hominin anatomy. These findings contribute to explain the complex evolution of the human skull.
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Avalos, Toby R. "Discerning hominid taxonomic variation in the southern Chinese, peninsular Southeast Asian, and Sundaic Pleistocene dental record." Diss., University of Iowa, 2017. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5705.

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Today’s highly endangered orangutan populations of Sumatra and Borneo offer but a glimpse into the taxonomic diversity and vast regional distribution enjoyed by orangutans and their great ape relatives in East Asia over the past 2.5 million years—a time when tropical forest pongine habitats stretched from Java to southern China. In addition to the giant terrestrial ape Gigantopithecus, other great ape genera have been proposed to have existed within this hominid community. The taxonomic diversity of this great ape faunal array is even further complicated when the purported presence of hominins at Early Pleistocene sites older than 1.85 Ma is considered. Highly acidic, the jungle floors of East Asia are notoriously bad at fossil preservation decomposing skeletal and dental evidence quickly. Fortunately, ph-neutral limestone caves have acted to offset these forces. The outcome of this peculiar taphonomy has left us with many teeth, but very little bone. With only unassociated fossil dentition to work with, modern geometric morphometrics offers scientists one of the few cutting-edge tools capable of systematically assessing this material reliably. This dissertation applies modern geometric morphometric statistical analysis to over two thousand fossil hominid teeth (Appendix A) from the Quaternary of southern China and Southeast Asia, which offers unique insight into the taxonomic diversity present in this sole Pleistocene great ape community. This study provides a much clearer understanding of the composition, paleoecology, and regional distribution of Pleistocene great ape communities of East Asia. Concordant with previous research, the main study and pilot study conducted in this dissertation showed Homo sapiens to always be morphologically and statistically distinct from extant and fossil orangutans. In turn, Pongo pygmaeus and Pongo abelii were continuously shown to be distinct from each other as well as from fossil Pongo groups. This investigation refutes hominin assignments for several teeth previously placed within early East Asian hominins (showing them to be orangutans instead) but supports the hominin status of the Jianshi upper third premolar. In combination with a published age of 1.95–2.15 million years (Ma), the hominin assignment reaffirmed here for the Jianshi dentition originally classified as human by Liu, Clarke, & Xing (2010) may offer a challenge to evolutionary models that recognize the 1.85 Ma Dmanisi hominins as the earliest hominins outside of Africa. This fact is often lost on most contemporary scientists due to their preoccupation with the 2.5 Ma Longgupo mandibular fragment, once thought to be a hominin but now assignable to an ape. Like the Jianshi upper third premolar, it is also based on a single specimen (in this case, a mandibular fragment). This dissertation supports the existence of Ciochon’s (2009) “mystery ape”. It refutes Schwartz et al., (1995) multiple Vietnamese Pongo taxa, including the proposed genus “Langsonia,” which is reassigned here to Pongo or the “mystery ape,” while placing Vietnamese fossil orangutans into either Pongo weidenreichi or Pongo devosi. Teeth from the Ralph von Koenigswald collection originally assigned to “Hemanthropus” were also determined to be representative of either the “mystery ape” or Pongo. Indeterminate “hominin” teeth were assignable to either Homo erectus, Homo sapiens, or Pongo only; no evidence was found for any other types of hominin species present in the collections examined for this study.
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Patel, Nirdesh D. "Efficient prediction of bite fracture force for hard food items." Amherst, Mass. : University of Massachusetts Amherst, 2009. http://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/228/.

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Townsend, Grant Clement. "Genetic studies of morphological variation in the human dentition /." Title page, contents, preface and overview only, 1994. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09D/09dt748.pdf.

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Books on the topic "Teeth Teeth Teeth Dental anthropology"

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G, Turner Christy, ed. The anthropology of modern human teeth: Dental morphology and its variation in recent human populations. Cambridge University Press, 1997.

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Calcagno, James M. Mechanisms of human dental reduction: A case study from post-Pleistocene Nubia. Dept. of Anthropology, University of Kansas, 1989.

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Duranteau, Florie. Les dents de l'homme: De la préhistoire à l'ère moderne. L'Harmattan, 2011.

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International Symposium on Dental Morphology (11th 1998 Oulu, Finland). Dental morphology '98: Proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Dental Morphology, Oulu, Finland, August, 1998. Edited by Mayhall John T. 1937- and Heikkinen Tuomo. Oulu University Press, 1999.

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Ramirez-Rozzi, Fernando. Les hominidés du plio-pléistocène de la vallée de l'Omo, Ethiopie: Microanatomie de l'émail et développement dentaire. CNRS Éditions, 1997.

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Mafart, Bertrand-Yves, and Djillali Hadjouis. Paléo-odontologie: Analyses et méthodes d'étude. Editions Artcom', 2001.

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Negrón, Luis Dávila. Q'eros, herencia Inca: Testimonio de expediciones odontológicas. [L. Dávila N., 1993.

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Taylor, R. M. S. Anatomy and biology of tooth dislocation and wear in the pre-European Maori and Australian Aborigine: Edge-to-edge bite, crowded anteriors, and other dental features. Published jointly by the Dept. of Anatomy, University of Auckland and the New Zealand Dental Research Foundation, 1991.

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Tomczyk, Jacek. Odontologiczne wyznaczniki stresu a czynniki środowiskowe kształtujące populacje z doliny środkowego Eufratu (Syria): Odontological stress indicators and factors affecting the population of the Middle Euphrates Valley. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego, 2012.

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International, Symposium on Dental Morphology (10th 1995 Berlin Germany). Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Dental Morphology: Berlin, Sept. 6-10, 1995. "M" Marketing Services, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Teeth Teeth Teeth Dental anthropology"

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Alt, Kurt W., and Sandra L. Pichler. "Artificial Modifications of Human Teeth." In Dental Anthropology. Springer Vienna, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-7496-8_20.

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Türp, Jens C., and Kurt W. Alt. "Anatomy and Morphology of Human Teeth." In Dental Anthropology. Springer Vienna, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-7496-8_6.

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Alt, Kurt W., and Jens C. Türp. "Roll Call: Thirty-Two White Horses on a Red Field. The Advantages of the FDI Two-Digit System of Designating Teeth." In Dental Anthropology. Springer Vienna, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-7496-8_4.

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Höhling, H. J. "Special Aspects of Biomineralization of Dental Tissues." In Teeth. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-83496-7_7.

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Frank, R. M., and J. Nalbandian. "Structure and Ultrastructure of the Dental Pulp." In Teeth. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-83496-7_5.

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Zhou, Zhong-Rong, Hai-Yang Yu, Jing Zheng, Lin-Mao Qian, and Yu Yan. "Introduction to Teeth." In Dental Biotribology. Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-4550-0_1.

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Zhou, Zhong-Rong, Hai-Yang Yu, Jing Zheng, Lin-Mao Qian, and Yu Yan. "Microtribology of Human Teeth." In Dental Biotribology. Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-4550-0_5.

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Schuurs, Albert. "Discoloration of Teeth." In Pathology of the Hard Dental Tissues. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd,., 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118702659.ch10.

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Larheim, Tore A., and Per-Lennart A. Westesson. "Teeth and Dental Implants." In Maxillofacial Imaging. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-53319-3_7.

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Antoine, Daniel, Charles M. FitzGerald, and Jerome C. Rose. "INCREMENTAL STRUCTURES IN TEETH." In Biological Anthropology of the Human Skeleton. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119151647.ch7.

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Conference papers on the topic "Teeth Teeth Teeth Dental anthropology"

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Hu, Zhanli, P. Z. Wu, Jianbao Gui, Yao Chen, and Hairong Zheng. "Teeth segmentation using dental CT data." In 2014 7th International Conference on Biomedical Engineering and Informatics (BMEI). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/bmei.2014.7002747.

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Rawicz, Andrew H., Ivan Melnyk, and Pawel Kowalski. "Translucency measurements in teeth and dental materials." In Biomedical Optics 2003, edited by Peter Rechmann, Daniel Fried, and Thomas Hennig. SPIE, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.500135.

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Low, I. M., J. Fulton, P. Cheang, and K. A. Khor. "DESIGNING NEW DENTAL MATERIALS THROUGH MIMICKING HUMAN TEETH." In Processing and Fabrication of Advanced Materials VIII. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812811431_0043.

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Marras, I., L. Papaleontiou, N. Nikolaidis, K. Lyroudia, and I. Pitas. "Virtual Dental Patient: a System for Virtual Teeth Drilling." In 2006 IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icme.2006.262533.

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Sinescu, C., V. F. Duma, S. Canjau, et al. "Dentistry investigations of teeth and dental prostheses using OCT." In SPIE Photonics Europe, edited by Jürgen Popp, Valery V. Tuchin, Dennis L. Matthews, and Francesco S. Pavone. SPIE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2227443.

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Rekow, D., and V. Thompson. "Dental Materials and Teeth: Testing Demands and Performance Challenges (Keynote)." In World Tribology Congress III. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/wtc2005-63768.

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Abstract:
Contact fatigue plays a critical role in performance of dental materials. Both naturally occurring materials (e.g., the tooth itself) and restorative materials, particularly ceramics are vulnerable to contact fatigue-induced and fatigue-exacerbated damage. Normal chewing functions are complex and unless accurately mimicked by test methods, do not reproduce clinically relevant failure modes. Without this, development of new material systems cannot proceed on a rational basis and will continue to rely on patients serving as the testing ground.
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Al-sherif, Nourdin, Guodong Guo, and Hany H. Ammar. "Automatic Classification of Teeth in Bitewing Dental Images Using OLPP." In 2012 IEEE International Symposium on Multimedia (ISM). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ism.2012.26.

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Poonsri, Arisa, Napapa Aimjirakul, Theekapun Charoenpong, and Chamaiporn Sukjamsri. "Teeth segmentation from dental x-ray image by template matching." In 2016 9th Biomedical Engineering International Conference (BMEiCON). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/bmeicon.2016.7859599.

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Aeini, Faraein, and Fariborz Mahmoudi. "Classification and numbering of posterior teeth in bitewing dental images." In 2010 3rd International Conference on Advanced Computer Theory and Engineering (ICACTE 2010). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icacte.2010.5579369.

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Rahmat, Romi Fadillah, Silviani Silviani, Erna Budhiarti Nababan, Opim Salim Sitompul, Rina Anugrahwaty, and Silmi Silmi. "Identification of molar and premolar teeth in dental panoramic radiograph image." In 2017 Second International Conference on Informatics and Computing (ICIC). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iac.2017.8280614.

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