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  2. Shovel-shaped incisors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shovel-shaped_incisors

    Shovel-shaped incisors. Shovel-shaped incisors and non-shovel-shaped incisors. Shovel-shaped incisors (or, more simply, shovel incisors) are incisors whose lingual surfaces are scooped as a consequence of lingual marginal ridges, crown curvature, or basal tubercles, either alone or in combination. [1]

  3. Sinodonty and Sundadonty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinodonty_and_Sundadonty

    [2] C.G Turner II shows with his analysis of 2016 that sundadonty is the proto-East Eurasian dental morphology and is not connected to the Australian dental morphology, rendering the term "proto-sundadont" inaccurate for the Australian dental morphology. He also shows that sinodonty is predominant in Native Americans. [3]

  4. Hominid dental morphology evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hominid_dental_morphology...

    The incisors also begin to show the shovel-shaped appearance, which can be attributed to a change towards a hunter-gatherer diet. [14] The reduction in molar size has been linked to the eating of softer foods, including cooked foods as well as more meat. [15]

  5. Multiregional origin of modern humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiregional_origin_of...

    [33] Palaeoanthropologist Fred H. Smith (2009) also emphasizes that: "It is the pattern of shoveling that identities as an East Asian regional feature, not just the occurrence of shoveling of any sort". [2] Multiregionalists argue that marked (+++) shovel-shaped incisors only appear in China at a high frequency, and have <10% occurrence elsewhere.

  6. ASUDAS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASUDAS

    The ASUDAS (Arizona State University Dental Anthropology System) is a reference system for collecting data on human tooth morphology and variation created by Christy G. Turner II, Christian R. Nichol, and G. Richard Scott. [1] The ASUDAS gives detailed descriptions for common crown and root shape variants and their different degrees of expression.

  7. Maxillary central incisor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxillary_central_incisor

    The maxillary central incisor is a human tooth in the front upper jaw, or maxilla, and is usually the most visible of all teeth in the mouth. It is located mesial (closer to the midline of the face) to the maxillary lateral incisor. As with all incisors, their function is for shearing or cutting food during mastication (chewing).

  8. Odontometrics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odontometrics

    Odontometrics is the measurement and study of tooth size. [1][2] It is used in biological anthropology and bioarchaeology to study human phenotypic variation. The rationale for use is similar to that of the study of dentition, the structure and arrangement of teeth. There are a number of features that can be observed in human teeth through the ...

  9. Mortuary archaeology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortuary_Archaeology

    Heather Edgar looks at the different dental characteristics that might be able to help researchers distinguish ancestry. Some of these traits are shovel-shaped incisors indicative of Asians and Native Americans and Carabelli's cusps characteristic of European descent. [14] The methods for estimating ancestry are scarce more work needs to be done.

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