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Journal ArticleDOI

Brief communication: The London atlas of human tooth development and eruption.

TLDR
Results show that tooth formation is least variable in infancy and most variable after the age of 16 years for the development of the third molar.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to develop a comprehensive evidence-based atlas to estimate age using both tooth development and alveolar eruption for human individuals between 28 weeks in utero and 23 years. This was a cross-sectional, retrospective study of archived material with the sample aged 2 years and older having a uniform age and sex distribution. Developing teeth from 72 prenatal and 104 postnatal skeletal remains of known age-at-death were examined from collections held at the Royal College of Surgeons of England and the Natural History Museum, London, UK (M 91, F 72, unknown sex 13). Data were also collected from dental radiographs of living individuals (M 264, F 264). Median stage for tooth development and eruption for all age categories was used to construct the atlas. Tooth development was determined according to Moorrees et al. (J Dent Res 42 (1963a) 490-502; Am J Phys Anthropol 21 (1963b) 205-213) and eruption was assessed relative to the alveolar bone level. Intraexaminer reproducibility calculated using Kappa on 150 teeth was 0.90 for 15 skeletal remains of age <2 years, and 0.81 from 605 teeth (50 radiographs). Age categories were monthly in the last trimester, 2 weeks perinatally, 3-month intervals during the first year, and at every year thereafter. Results show that tooth formation is least variable in infancy and most variable after the age of 16 years for the development of the third molar.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Early human dispersals within the Americas.

J. Víctor Moreno-Mayar, +60 more
- 07 Dec 2018 - 
TL;DR: Analysis of the oldest genomes suggests that there was an early split within Beringian populations, giving rise to the Northern and Southern lineages, and that the early population spread widely and rapidly suggests that their access to large portions of the hemisphere was essentially unrestricted, yet there are genomic and archaeological hints of an earlier human presence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconstruction of breastfeeding and weaning practices using stable isotope and trace element analyses: A review.

TL;DR: Applying the geochemical reconstruction of breastfeeding and weaning practices to human ecology, primatology, and paleoanthropology is important; basic studies of the underlying physiological mechanisms and technical improvements in the analyses will further highlight avenues for future research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accuracy of dental age estimation charts: Schour and Massler, Ubelaker and the London Atlas.

TL;DR: Findings show that the London Atlas performs better than Schour and Massler and Ubelaker and represents a substantial improvement in accuracy of dental age estimation from developing teeth.
Journal ArticleDOI

The makers of the Protoaurignacian and implications for Neandertal extinction

TL;DR: Dental remains from two Protoaurignacian sites in Italy are analyzed and confirm that they were H. sapiens, and teeth from Riparo Bombrini and Grotta di Fumane contain ancient mitochondrial DNA of a modern human type, confirming that by 41,000 calendar years before the present, modern humans bearing ProtoaurIGNacian culture spread into southern Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental defects of enamel and dentine: challenges for basic science research and clinical management.

TL;DR: Despite major advances in scientific knowledge regarding the causes of enamel and dentine defects, further research is required in order to translate the knowledge gained in the basic sciences research to accurate clinical diagnosis and successful treatment of the defects.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of observer agreement for categorical data

TL;DR: A general statistical methodology for the analysis of multivariate categorical data arising from observer reliability studies is presented and tests for interobserver bias are presented in terms of first-order marginal homogeneity and measures of interob server agreement are developed as generalized kappa-type statistics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age Variation of Formation Stages for Ten Permanent Teeth

TL;DR: The purpose of the present study is to provide norms of the formation of ten permanent teeth, namely, the maxillary incisors and all eight mandibular teeth.
Book Chapter

Standards of human tooth formation and dental age assessment

TL;DR: Critical review of methods of production and use of chronologies of formation of human teeth and their applications in medicine, dentistry and dentistry.
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