The detailed anatomical features that characterize fossil hominin molars figure prominently in the reconstruction of their taxonomy, phylogeny, and paleobiology. Despite the prominence of molar form in human origins research, the underlying developmental mechanisms generating the diversity of tooth crown features remain poorly understood. A model of tooth morphogenesis—the patterning cascade model (PCM)—provides a developmental framework to explore how and why the varying molar morphologies arose throughout human evolution. We generated virtual maps of the inner enamel epithelium—an indelibly preserved record of enamel knot arrangement—in 17 living and fossil hominoid species to investigate whether the PCM explains the expression of all maj...
<div><p>The form of two hard tissues of the mammalian tooth, dentine and enamel, is the result of a ...
Results of studies on cusp homology, experimental studies of dental growth and development and the d...
International audienceDental tissues provide important insights into aspects of hominid palaeobiolog...
The detailed anatomical features that characterize fossil hominin molars figure prominently in the r...
Evolutionary studies of mammalian teeth have generally concentrated on the adaptive and functional s...
Metameric variation of molar size is in part associated with the dietary adaptations of mammals and ...
Primate molar shapes reflect developmental and ecological processes. Development may constrain as we...
Tooth crown morphology is of primary importance in fossil primate systematics and understanding the ...
The variation in molar tooth size in humans and our closest relatives (hominins) has strongly influe...
Understanding mechanisms responsible for changes in tooth morphology in the course of evolution is a...
Molar crown morphology varies among primates from relatively simple in some taxa to more complex in ...
As the most common and best preserved remains in the fossil record, teeth are central to our underst...
Variation in tooth crown morphology plays a crucial role in species diagnoses, phylogenetic inferenc...
BACKGROUND:Understanding mechanisms responsible for changes in tooth morphology in the course of evo...
The fossil record is widely informative about evolution, but fossils have not been systematically us...
<div><p>The form of two hard tissues of the mammalian tooth, dentine and enamel, is the result of a ...
Results of studies on cusp homology, experimental studies of dental growth and development and the d...
International audienceDental tissues provide important insights into aspects of hominid palaeobiolog...
The detailed anatomical features that characterize fossil hominin molars figure prominently in the r...
Evolutionary studies of mammalian teeth have generally concentrated on the adaptive and functional s...
Metameric variation of molar size is in part associated with the dietary adaptations of mammals and ...
Primate molar shapes reflect developmental and ecological processes. Development may constrain as we...
Tooth crown morphology is of primary importance in fossil primate systematics and understanding the ...
The variation in molar tooth size in humans and our closest relatives (hominins) has strongly influe...
Understanding mechanisms responsible for changes in tooth morphology in the course of evolution is a...
Molar crown morphology varies among primates from relatively simple in some taxa to more complex in ...
As the most common and best preserved remains in the fossil record, teeth are central to our underst...
Variation in tooth crown morphology plays a crucial role in species diagnoses, phylogenetic inferenc...
BACKGROUND:Understanding mechanisms responsible for changes in tooth morphology in the course of evo...
The fossil record is widely informative about evolution, but fossils have not been systematically us...
<div><p>The form of two hard tissues of the mammalian tooth, dentine and enamel, is the result of a ...
Results of studies on cusp homology, experimental studies of dental growth and development and the d...
International audienceDental tissues provide important insights into aspects of hominid palaeobiolog...