Dental Anthropology

Front Cover
Cambridge 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.

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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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