Mammalian tooth enamel is often chipped, providing clear evidence for localized contacts with large hard food objects. Here, we apply a simple fracture equation to estimate peak bite forces directly from chip size. Many fossil hominins exhibit antemortem chips on their posterior teeth, indicating their use of high bite forces. The inference that these species must have consumed large hard foods such as seeds is supported by the occurrence of similar chips among known modern-day seed predators such as orangutans and peccaries. The existence of tooth chip signatures also provides a way of identifying the consumption of rarely eaten foods that dental microwear and isotopic analysis are unlikely to detect
The food an organism consumes impacts the evolution of its dentition and facial morphology. As the t...
Preliminary analyses of total crown area and dentine exposure surfaces in a sample of hominid teeth ...
Hominin dietary specialization is crucial to understanding the evolutionary changes of craniofacial ...
Mammalian tooth enamel is often chipped, providing clear evidence for localized contacts with large ...
Objectives: A variety of mechanical processes can result in antemortem dental chipping. In this stud...
The research in this master\u27s thesis examines the mechanics of primate and early hominid feeding ...
Lucas and colleagues recently proposed a model based on fracture and deformation concepts to describ...
This contribution investigates the evolution of diet in the Pan – Homo and hominin clades. It does t...
The considerable variation in shape, size, structure and properties of the enamel cap covering mamma...
All animals need energy and nutrients to survive, to compete for resources, and to facilitate reprod...
The considerable variation in shape, size, structure and properties of the enamel cap covering mamma...
Diet is a driving force in human evolution. Two species of Plio-Pleistocene hominins, and , have ...
Teeth are brittle and highly susceptible to cracking. We propose that observations of such cracking ...
According to the current fossil record, the extinct hominin genus Paranthropus and the genus Homo bo...
Primate teeth adapt to the physical properties of foods in a variety of ways including changes in oc...
The food an organism consumes impacts the evolution of its dentition and facial morphology. As the t...
Preliminary analyses of total crown area and dentine exposure surfaces in a sample of hominid teeth ...
Hominin dietary specialization is crucial to understanding the evolutionary changes of craniofacial ...
Mammalian tooth enamel is often chipped, providing clear evidence for localized contacts with large ...
Objectives: A variety of mechanical processes can result in antemortem dental chipping. In this stud...
The research in this master\u27s thesis examines the mechanics of primate and early hominid feeding ...
Lucas and colleagues recently proposed a model based on fracture and deformation concepts to describ...
This contribution investigates the evolution of diet in the Pan – Homo and hominin clades. It does t...
The considerable variation in shape, size, structure and properties of the enamel cap covering mamma...
All animals need energy and nutrients to survive, to compete for resources, and to facilitate reprod...
The considerable variation in shape, size, structure and properties of the enamel cap covering mamma...
Diet is a driving force in human evolution. Two species of Plio-Pleistocene hominins, and , have ...
Teeth are brittle and highly susceptible to cracking. We propose that observations of such cracking ...
According to the current fossil record, the extinct hominin genus Paranthropus and the genus Homo bo...
Primate teeth adapt to the physical properties of foods in a variety of ways including changes in oc...
The food an organism consumes impacts the evolution of its dentition and facial morphology. As the t...
Preliminary analyses of total crown area and dentine exposure surfaces in a sample of hominid teeth ...
Hominin dietary specialization is crucial to understanding the evolutionary changes of craniofacial ...