2015
DOI: 10.1002/oa.2510
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Frequencies of Rare Incisor Variations Reflect Factors Influencing Precontact Population Relationships in Mexico and the American Southwest

Abstract: Mexican prehistory is characterized by migration and population isolation in its earliest phase, followed by later inter‐population cultural interactions, such as politics and trade. While shared, common morphological variants are often informative about recent population events, rare trait variants have not been widely investigated to see whether they might be informative about earlier events. Here, we consider populations that show several rare variants at frequencies high enough to warrant such an investiga… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…All 13 samples originated from Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, including an incisor presenting an accessory enamel cusp (S197). The accessory cusp of S197 has developed on the cingulum and reached beyond half the distance to the incisal edge (Figure 1), as such it is diagnosed as a talon cusp (Edgar et al, 2016). The remaining 12 incisors made up a standard sample, with each tooth presenting no evidence of stress, pathology, or accessory enamel growth.…”
Section: Dental Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…All 13 samples originated from Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, including an incisor presenting an accessory enamel cusp (S197). The accessory cusp of S197 has developed on the cingulum and reached beyond half the distance to the incisal edge (Figure 1), as such it is diagnosed as a talon cusp (Edgar et al, 2016). The remaining 12 incisors made up a standard sample, with each tooth presenting no evidence of stress, pathology, or accessory enamel growth.…”
Section: Dental Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The maxillary left lateral incisor of the 15-17-year-old female individual recovered from nearby Bundle 5 showed a mild flexion of the long axis of the tooth root relative to that of the crown (cf. "mesial bending"; Edgar 2017; Edgar et al 2016) accompanied by prominent interruption grooves along both mesial and distal marginal ridges, with the mesial groove extending halfway down the root. This individual's maxillary left third premolar was rotated 90° toward the mesial aspect, such that the buccal surface faces mesially.…”
Section: Dental Pathologymentioning
confidence: 99%