Prehistoric dental treatments have been known from the Neolithic 9,000-7,500 years before present (BP) [1], when the adoption of early farming culture caused an increase of carious lesions [2]. Only a few early cases have been documented [3], some were characterized by in vivo perforation of the crown surface made by a drilling tool [1]. Here we document the earliest evidence of proto-dental therapeutic intervention on a Late Upper Paleolithic modern human lower right third molar (RM3) from a burial in Northern Italy [4]. The RM3 belongs to a young male individual (ca. 25 years old) unearthed in 1988 from the Epigravettian deposit of Riparo Villabruna (Sovramonte – Belluno, Italy), and dated around 14,160-13,820 BP. This tooth presents a la...
We present a Neanderthal maxilla (CF-1) from Cova Foradà site (Oliva, Valencia, Spain) with periodon...
Riparo Villabruna (Sovramonte – Belluno – Italy) is a small shelter with Final Epigravettian lithic ...
Evidence of prehistoric dentistry has been limited to a few cases, the most ancient dating back to t...
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...
Objectives Early evidence for the treatment of dental pathology is found primarily among food-produc...
The Neolithic Funnel Beaker cemetery of Modřice, dated to 4850-4900 years before present (uncalibrat...
The Qafzeh 3 Middle Paleolithic early modern human partial dentition presents four antemortem defect...
The use of ‘teeth as tools’ (non-masticatory or cultural-related dental wear) has largely been emplo...
Paleoodontological research proved that some form of cosmetic dentistry existed in the ancient time....
We present a Neanderthal maxilla (CF-1) from Cova Forada ̀ site (Oliva, Valencia, Spain) with period...
Objectives The aim of the study is the assessment of Nadale 1, a Neandertal deciduous tooth recentl...
We present a Neanderthal maxilla (CF-1) from Cova Foradà site (Oliva, Valencia, Spain) with periodon...
Riparo Villabruna (Sovramonte – Belluno – Italy) is a small shelter with Final Epigravettian lithic ...
Evidence of prehistoric dentistry has been limited to a few cases, the most ancient dating back to t...
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...
Objectives Early evidence for the treatment of dental pathology is found primarily among food-produc...
The Neolithic Funnel Beaker cemetery of Modřice, dated to 4850-4900 years before present (uncalibrat...
The Qafzeh 3 Middle Paleolithic early modern human partial dentition presents four antemortem defect...
The use of ‘teeth as tools’ (non-masticatory or cultural-related dental wear) has largely been emplo...
Paleoodontological research proved that some form of cosmetic dentistry existed in the ancient time....
We present a Neanderthal maxilla (CF-1) from Cova Forada ̀ site (Oliva, Valencia, Spain) with period...
Objectives The aim of the study is the assessment of Nadale 1, a Neandertal deciduous tooth recentl...
We present a Neanderthal maxilla (CF-1) from Cova Foradà site (Oliva, Valencia, Spain) with periodon...
Riparo Villabruna (Sovramonte – Belluno – Italy) is a small shelter with Final Epigravettian lithic ...
Evidence of prehistoric dentistry has been limited to a few cases, the most ancient dating back to t...