Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apella

Dental microwear texture pattern has been associated with aspects of diet for a broad range of mammalian taxa. The basic idea is that soft, tough foods are sheared with a steeper angle of approach between opposing occlusal surfaces, whereas hard, brittle items are crushed with forces perpendicular t...

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Main Authors: Peter S. Ungar, Claire L. Hartgrove, Alexa N. Wimberly, Mark F. Teaford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017-12-01
Series:Biosurface and Biotribology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405451817300193
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spelling doaj-3075faddec5d43f1a379b17eb1a112382021-04-02T11:33:45ZengWileyBiosurface and Biotribology2405-45182017-12-013412413410.1016/j.bsbt.2017.12.002Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apellaPeter S. Ungar0Claire L. Hartgrove1Alexa N. Wimberly2Mark F. Teaford3Department of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701, USADepartment of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701, USADepartment of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701, USADepartment of Basic Science, Touro University, Vallejo, CA 94592, USADental microwear texture pattern has been associated with aspects of diet for a broad range of mammalian taxa. The basic idea is that soft, tough foods are sheared with a steeper angle of approach between opposing occlusal surfaces, whereas hard, brittle items are crushed with forces perpendicular to those surfaces; and this difference is manifested in anisotropic, striated microwear textures for tough foods, and complex, pitted ones for hard objects. Other factors may, however, influence microwear texture pattern and confound diet signals. For example, if tooth surface slope influences angle of approach between opposing teeth, then perhaps wear-related changes in tooth shape could affect microwear pattern. This study evaluates the effects of occlusal topography on microwear texture for a series of variably worn upper second molars of one primate species, Sapajus apella. Results indicate no significant covariation between any measured topographic attribute (average slope, angularity, relief) and microwear texture variable (complexity, anisotropy, textural fill volume). This suggests that, for this taxon at least, wear-related changes in tooth form do not affect microwear pattern in a consistent manner. This implies that variably worn teeth can be included in samples for comparisons aimed at distinguishing groups by diet.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405451817300193Tooth wearOcclusal formMasticatory kinematics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter S. Ungar
Claire L. Hartgrove
Alexa N. Wimberly
Mark F. Teaford
spellingShingle Peter S. Ungar
Claire L. Hartgrove
Alexa N. Wimberly
Mark F. Teaford
Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apella
Biosurface and Biotribology
Tooth wear
Occlusal form
Masticatory kinematics
author_facet Peter S. Ungar
Claire L. Hartgrove
Alexa N. Wimberly
Mark F. Teaford
author_sort Peter S. Ungar
title Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apella
title_short Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apella
title_full Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apella
title_fullStr Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apella
title_full_unstemmed Dental topography and microwear texture in Sapajus apella
title_sort dental topography and microwear texture in sapajus apella
publisher Wiley
series Biosurface and Biotribology
issn 2405-4518
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Dental microwear texture pattern has been associated with aspects of diet for a broad range of mammalian taxa. The basic idea is that soft, tough foods are sheared with a steeper angle of approach between opposing occlusal surfaces, whereas hard, brittle items are crushed with forces perpendicular to those surfaces; and this difference is manifested in anisotropic, striated microwear textures for tough foods, and complex, pitted ones for hard objects. Other factors may, however, influence microwear texture pattern and confound diet signals. For example, if tooth surface slope influences angle of approach between opposing teeth, then perhaps wear-related changes in tooth shape could affect microwear pattern. This study evaluates the effects of occlusal topography on microwear texture for a series of variably worn upper second molars of one primate species, Sapajus apella. Results indicate no significant covariation between any measured topographic attribute (average slope, angularity, relief) and microwear texture variable (complexity, anisotropy, textural fill volume). This suggests that, for this taxon at least, wear-related changes in tooth form do not affect microwear pattern in a consistent manner. This implies that variably worn teeth can be included in samples for comparisons aimed at distinguishing groups by diet.
topic Tooth wear
Occlusal form
Masticatory kinematics
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405451817300193
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