Objectives Early evidence for the treatment of dental pathology is found primarily among food-producing societies associated with high levels of oral pathology. However, some Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers show extensive oral pathology, suggesting that experimentation with therapeutic dental interventions may have greater antiquity. Here, we report the second earliest probable evidence for dentistry in a Late Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherer recovered from Riparo Fredian (Tuscany, Italy). Materials and Methods The Fredian 5 human consists of an associated maxillary anterior dentition with antemortem exposure of both upper first incisor (I1) pulp chambers. The pulp chambers present probable antemortem modifications that warrant in-depth ...
The use of ‘teeth as tools’ (non-masticatory or cultural-related dental wear) has largely been emplo...
The Protoaurignacian culture is pivotal to the debate about the timing of the arrival of modern huma...
The teeth of six individuals fronr Grotta del Romito at Papasidero (Cosenza), dating back to the en...
Objectives: Early evidence for the treatment of dental pathology is found primarily among food-produ...
Prehistoric dental treatments have been known from the Neolithic 9,000-7,500 years before present (B...
Prehistoric dental treatments were extremely rare, and the few documented cases are known from the N...
Prehistoric dental treatments were extremely rare, and the few documented cases are known from the N...
This paper provides results from a suite of analyses made on human dental material from the Late Pal...
This paper provides results from a suite of analyses made on human dental material from the Late Pal...
The use of ‘teeth as tools’ (non-masticatory or cultural-related dental wear) has largely been emplo...
The Protoaurignacian culture is pivotal to the debate about the timing of the arrival of modern huma...
The teeth of six individuals fronr Grotta del Romito at Papasidero (Cosenza), dating back to the en...
Objectives: Early evidence for the treatment of dental pathology is found primarily among food-produ...
Prehistoric dental treatments have been known from the Neolithic 9,000-7,500 years before present (B...
Prehistoric dental treatments were extremely rare, and the few documented cases are known from the N...
Prehistoric dental treatments were extremely rare, and the few documented cases are known from the N...
This paper provides results from a suite of analyses made on human dental material from the Late Pal...
This paper provides results from a suite of analyses made on human dental material from the Late Pal...
The use of ‘teeth as tools’ (non-masticatory or cultural-related dental wear) has largely been emplo...
The Protoaurignacian culture is pivotal to the debate about the timing of the arrival of modern huma...
The teeth of six individuals fronr Grotta del Romito at Papasidero (Cosenza), dating back to the en...