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Anthropological Perspectives on Tooth Morphology
Genetics, Evolution, Variation

This follow-up to The Anthropology of Modern Human Teeth puts methods to use in interpreting human origins and affinities.

G. Richard Scott (Edited by), Joel D. Irish (Edited by)

9781107011458, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 21 February 2013

582 pages, 107 b/w illus. 8 colour illus. 47 tables
22.9 x 15 x 3 cm, 1.03 kg

'All in all, this book provides useful contributions to the anthropological perspective on variation in tooth crown morphology, which is in keeping with the editors' aim to provide a Festschrift to Christy G. Turner, II.' Frederick E. Grine, The Quarterly Review of Biology

Researchers have long had an interest in dental morphology as a genetic proxy to reconstruct population history. Much interest was fostered by the use of standard plaques and associated descriptions that comprise the Arizona State University Dental Anthropology System, developed by Christy G. Turner, II and students. This system has served as the foundation for hundreds of anthropological studies for over 30 years. In recognition of that success, this volume brings together some of the world's leading dental morphologists to expand upon the concepts and methods presented in the popular The Anthropology of Modern Human Teeth (Cambridge, 1997), leading the reader from method to applied research. After a preparatory section on the current knowledge of heritability and gene expression, a series of case studies demonstrate the utility of dental morphological study in both fossil and more recent populations (and individuals), from local to global scales.

List of contributors
1. Introduction G. Richard Scott and Joel D. Irish
2. Bite marks in tule quids: the life and times of a dental anthropologist Christy G. Turner, II
3. Twin and family studies of human dental crown morphology: genetic, epigenetic and environmental determinants of the modern human dentition Toby Hughes and Grant Townsend
4. Teeth, morphogenesis, and levels of variation in the human Carabelli trait Debbie Guatelli-Steinberg, John P. Hunter, Ryan M. Durner, Stephanie Moormann, Theresia C. Weston and Tracy K. Betsinger
5. The expression of human sex chromosome genes in oral and craniofacial growth Lassi Alvesalo
6. Significant among-population associations found between dental characters and environmental factors Yuji Mizoguchi
7. Using geometric morphometrics to study the mechanisms that pattern primate dental variation Oliver T. Rizk, Theresa M. Grieco, Michael W. Holmes and Leslea J. Hlusko
8. Evolution of hominin postcanine macromorphology: a comparative meta-analysis Kes Schroer and Bernard Wood
9. Dental morphology of European Middle Pleistocene populations María Martinón-Torres, José María Bermúdez de Castro, Laura Martín-Francés, Ana Gracia-Téllez, Ignacio Martínez and Juan Luis Arsuaga
10. What does it mean to be dentally 'modern'? Shara E. Bailey and Jean-Jacques Hublin
11. From outer to inner structural morphology in dental anthropology: integration of the third dimension in the visualization and quantitative analysis of fossil remains Roberto Macchiarelli, Priscilla Bayle, Luca Bondioli, Arnaud Mazurier and Clément Zanolli
12. Afridonty: the 'Sub-Saharan African Dental Complex' revisited Joel D. Irish
13. Basque dental morphology and the 'Eurodont' dental pattern G. Richard Scott, Alberto Anta, Conchita de la Rúa and Roman Schomberg
14. A first look at the dental morphometrics of early Palauans Greg C. Nelson and Scott M. Fitzpatrick
15. Grades, gradients, and geography: a dental morphometric approach to the population history of South Asia Brian E. Hemphill
16. Do all Asians look alike? A dental nonmetric analysis of population diversity at the dawn of the Chinese empire (770 BC–AD 420) Christine Lee and Linhu Zhang
17. Sinodonty and beyond: hemispheric, regional, and intracemetery approaches to studying dental morphological variation in the New World Christopher M. Stojanowski, Kent M. Johnson and William N. Duncan
18. Crown morphology of Malay deciduous teeth: trait frequencies and biological affinities John R. Lukacs and Sri Kuswandari
19. Geographic structure of dental variation in the major human populations of the world Tsunehiko Hanihara
20. New approaches to the use of dental morphology in forensic contexts Heather J. H. Edgar and Stephen D. Ousley
21. Wears the problem? Examining the effect of dental wear on studies of crown morphology Scott E. Burnett, Joel D. Irish and Michael R. Fong
Index.

Subject Areas: Human biology [PSX], Evolution [PSAJ], Dentistry [MMD], Physical anthropology [JHMP], Anthropology [JHM]

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