書名 : The tales teeth tell :development, evolution, behavior /
紀錄類型 : 書目-語言資料,印刷品: 單行本
正題名[資料類型標示]/作者 : The tales teeth tell :Tanya M. Smith.
其他題名 : development, evolution, behavior /
作者 : Smith, Tanya M.
出版者 : Cambridge, MA :The MIT Press,c2018.
面頁冊數 : xviii, 277 p. :col. ill. ;24 cm.
內容註 : Microscopes, cells, and biological rhythms -- The big picture : birth, death, and everything in between -- Things that can go wrong : stress, pathology, and dysevolution -- Adaptive shifts from fish to mammals -- From humble beginnings : primate and human origins -- The evolution of human growth and development -- Paleo dining - are you what you eat? -- Teeth as tools, status symbols, and signposts -- Tooth manipulation through the ages.
標題 : Dental anthropology.
ISBN : 9780262038713 (hbk.) :
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100 1 $aSmith, Tanya M.
245 14$aThe tales teeth tell :$bdevelopment, evolution, behavior /$cTanya M. Smith.
260 $aCambridge, MA :$bThe MIT Press,$cc2018.
300 $axviii, 277 p. :$bcol. ill. ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 $aMicroscopes, cells, and biological rhythms -- The big picture : birth, death, and everything in between -- Things that can go wrong : stress, pathology, and dysevolution -- Adaptive shifts from fish to mammals -- From humble beginnings : primate and human origins -- The evolution of human growth and development -- Paleo dining - are you what you eat? -- Teeth as tools, status symbols, and signposts -- Tooth manipulation through the ages.
520 $a"Why do anthropologists study teeth? Teeth contain detailed records of growth, health, and diet, as well as our evolutionary history. So what are the tales teeth tell? The French naturalist George Cuvier famously remarked, "Show me your teeth and I will tell you who you are." In this book, we will explore the intimate precision, striking beauty, and integrative power of incremental growth rhythms in teeth. We will also consider the surprising records of behavior that remain on their surfaces for millennia. For example, the plaque our hygienists carefully remove traps food particles, bacteria, and DNA from our own cells in a sticky layer that can fossilize over time into dental calculus. While calculus doesn't show the same faithful records as enamel and dentine, it captures human activity after our teeth finish growing, continuing the story of our behavior and health into adulthood and old age. We'll learn how complementary clues such as microscopic scratches and pits formed during chewing have spawned serious debates about the evolution of the human diet. And we'll see how evidence from teeth may point to the uniqueness of our own species, Homo sapiens, with our long childhoods, remarkably diverse diets, and complex behaviors"--$cProvided by publisher.
650 0$aDental anthropology.
650 0$aDental calculus$xStudy and teaching.
650 0$aTeeth$xHistory.