Short and long-term in vivo human buccal-dental microwear turnover.
Romero A, Galbany J, De Juan J, Pérez-Pérez A (2012). Short and long-term in vivo human buccal dental-microwear turnover. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.22054
Buccal–dental microwear depends on the abrasive content of chewed foodstuffs and can reveal long-term dietary trends... more
Buccal–dental microwear depends on the abrasive content of chewed foodstuffs and can reveal long-term dietary trends in human populations. However, in vivo experimental analyses of buccal microwear formation processes are scarce. Here, we report the effects of an abrasive diet on microwear rates in two adult volunteers at intervals of 8 days over a period of 1 month and document long-term turnover over 5 consecutive years in the same subjects under an ad libitum Mediterranean diet. Buccal microwear was analyzed on mandibular first molars using high-resolution replicas and scanning electron microscopy. Microwear turnover was assessed by recording the scratches lost and gained at each time point. Our results indicate that scratch formation on enamel surfaces increased with a highly abrasive diet compared to both pre-test and post-test ad libitum dietary controls. In the long-term analysis, scratch turnover was higher than expected, but no significant long-term trends in microwear density or length were observed, because microwear formation was compensated by scratch disappearance. Our results confirm that buccal microwear patterns on mandibular molars show a dynamic formation process directly related to the chewing of abrasive particles along with ingested food. In addition, the observed long-term stability of buccal microwear patterns makes them a reliable indicator of overall dietary habits.
KEY WORDS: teeth, buccal surface, SEM, dental microwear, turnover.
“Viemos todos da África”
“Viemos todos da África” Historia do Negro no Brasil, Fascículo 6. Coleções Caros Amigos, Páginas 170-172. 2009
Un assemblage original au paléolithique moyen: le repaire à hyènes, porcs-épics et hominidés de la Grotte Geula (Mont Carmel, Israël).
Monchot, H. 2005. Paléorient 31(2), 27-42.
Less well-known than the caves of Kebara or Tabun, situated on the western slope of Mount Carmel, the cave of Geula... more Less well-known than the caves of Kebara or Tabun, situated on the western slope of Mount Carmel, the cave of Geula located on the northern flank, was excavated in the 1960’s by E. Wreschner. He recovered an enormous number of mammalian bones and a scanty lithic industry attributed to the Mousterian, in addition to three human fragments identified as Homo sapiens. Nonetheless, the most interesting find is the remarkable faunal list comprising numerous species of carnivores, dominated by the spotted hyena and a classic spectrum of southern Levantine herbivores, gazelle and Mesopotamian fallow deer being the most numerous. However, the “star” of the site is certainly the porcupine, whose remains were found in exceptional abundance and is clearly the most common taxon in the assemblage. A preliminary archaeozoological and taphonomic study clearly shows that Geula cave served as both a hyena den and a porcupine lair, a unique phenomenon in Mount Carmel in particular, and in the Middle and Near East in general. The low density of lithic remains confirms the short occupation by hominids at a time when the cave was abandoned by carnivores.
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