Dental AnthropologyCambridge University Press, 1996 M09 28 - 389 pages Teeth are among the best sources of evidence for both identification purposes and studies of demography, biological relationships, and health in ancient human communities. The anthropologist's specimen may be a cast that a dentist has taken from a living mouth, or actual teeth from an archaeological site or forensic case. This text introduces the complex biology of teeth and provides a practical guide to all essential aspects of dental anthropology, including excavation, identification, microscopic study, and tooth age determination. Dental Anthropology is a concise yet comprehensive resource designed for students and researchers in anthropology and archaeology. |
Contents
I | 1 |
II | 6 |
III | 14 |
IV | 22 |
V | 30 |
VI | 38 |
VII | 44 |
VIII | 51 |
XLIV | 205 |
XLV | 206 |
XLVIII | 209 |
XLIX | 213 |
L | 214 |
LI | 215 |
LII | 216 |
LIII | 224 |
IX | 59 |
X | 67 |
XII | 69 |
XIII | 84 |
XIV | 102 |
XV | 105 |
XVI | 109 |
XVII | 113 |
XVIII | 114 |
XIX | 117 |
XX | 124 |
XXI | 130 |
XXII | 136 |
XXIII | 145 |
XXIV | 147 |
XXV | 148 |
XXVI | 152 |
XXVII | 164 |
XXVIII | 176 |
XXIX | 180 |
XXX | 181 |
XXXI | 183 |
XXXII | 184 |
XXXIII | 186 |
XXXIV | 192 |
XXXV | 193 |
XXXVI | 195 |
XXXVII | 197 |
XXXVIII | 198 |
XXXIX | 201 |
XL | 203 |
XLI | 204 |
LIV | 230 |
LV | 232 |
LVI | 242 |
LVII | 250 |
LVIII | 253 |
LIX | 254 |
LX | 259 |
LXI | 268 |
LXII | 283 |
LXIII | 287 |
LXIV | 288 |
LXV | 289 |
LXVII | 290 |
LXIX | 291 |
LXX | 292 |
LXXI | 293 |
LXXII | 294 |
LXXIII | 295 |
LXXIV | 296 |
LXXV | 297 |
LXXVI | 298 |
LXXVII | 299 |
LXXVIII | 303 |
LXXIX | 304 |
LXXX | 305 |
LXXXI | 307 |
LXXXII | 308 |
LXXXIII | 312 |
LXXXIV | 315 |
LXXXV | 366 |
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Common terms and phrases
alveolar bone anthropology archaeological attrition Australopithecus ballad bone brown striae buccal canines caries cement cervical Chicago church collagen court crown diameters culture cusp deciduous teeth defects dental caries distobuccal early modern Elizabeth Elizabethan enamel England English facets Faerie Queene fibres Figure fissure fossa genre gingival Gorboduc groove Henry VIII hominids Homo human humanist incisors John layer lesion lingual literary literature London lower molars lyric marginal ridge matrix measurements mesial mesiobuccal mesiodistal mesiolingual microscope mineralized More's occlusal Oxford Paranthropus pattern periodontal periodontal ligament Permanent upper plaque plays poems poetic poetry poets political popular premolars printed Protestant pulp chamber Queen Reformation Renaissance rhetoric Richard rogue literature root satire second incisors second molars secondary dentine sexual Shakespeare Sidney Sidney's sixteenth century social sonnet specimens Spenser stage striae of Retzius studies Table texts third molars Thomas tooth Tudor University Press verse wear writing