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  2. Ohaguro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohaguro

    Si La men painted their teeth red, while women painted their teeth black. [10] These traditions declined in the 20th century, decade by decade with each new generation, [49] although colonial medical reports from the 1930s stated that 80 percent of Tonkinese farmers had darkened teeth. [49]

  3. Teeth blackening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teeth_blackening

    A common belief is that blackened teeth differentiated humans from animals. Teeth blackening is often done in conjunction with traditions of tooth sharpening and dental evulsion, as well as other body modification customs like tattoos. Teeth blackening and filing were regarded with fascination and disapproval by early European explorers and ...

  4. Human tooth sharpening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_tooth_sharpening

    Ota Benga, a famous Congolese pygmy, shows off his sharpened teeth. A man with filed teeth (probably Mentawai) smokes in a photograph by Dutch photographer Christiaan Benjamin Nieuwenhuis who worked in Sumatra. Human tooth sharpening is the practice of manually sharpening the teeth, usually the front incisors. Filed teeth are customary in ...

  5. Japanese female beauty practices and ideals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_female_beauty...

    Teeth blackening during the Heian period, known as ohaguro, involved coating the teeth black with paint, mainly done by the wealthy. There are many suspected reasons Japanese people practiced teeth blackening. Some sources claim black teeth imitated tooth decay, and decay was a status symbol as only the wealthy could afford sweets. [9]

  6. Tooth ablation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tooth_ablation

    A BaTonga woman with extracted front teeth, for beauty purposes. Tooth ablation (also known as tooth evulsion , dental evulsion and tooth extraction ) is the deliberate removal of a person's healthy teeth , and has been recorded in a variety of ancient and modern societies around the world.

  7. Remarkable video captures chimps cleaning deceased ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/news/2017/03/17/remarkable...

    They suggest the act was a mortuary ritual. Researchers filmed an adult female chimp using a tool to clean the teeth of another deceased chimp. They suggest the act was a mortuary ritual.

  8. Aztec body modification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec_body_modification

    Teeth were another skeletal body part that was modified, usually by filing the tooth. Precious stones were often placed into bored holes in the teeth; some precious stones were jadeite, pyrite, or turquoise. This practice was most likely done when an individual was reaching young adulthood, as can be determined through the dating of the teeth ...

  9. Nacirema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nacirema

    Some of the popular aspects of Nacirema culture include: medicine men and women (doctors, psychiatrists, and pharmacists), a charm-box (medicine cabinet), the mouth-rite ritual (brushing teeth), and a cultural hero known as Notgnihsaw (Washington spelled backwards). [1]