Adapting Clinical Tooth Wear Assessment Methods for Biological Anthropology Contexts
Ian Towle, Luca Fiorenza

TL;DR
This study adapts clinical methods for measuring tooth wear to analyze dental tissue loss in Australian Aboriginal individuals, revealing insights into diet and oral health.
Contribution
The study demonstrates how clinical wear-assessment tools can be applied to biological anthropology for quantifying physiological tooth wear.
Findings
Average annual tissue loss was 4 mm³, with high-wear regions losing up to 215 μm in thickness per year.
Significant variation in wear patterns was observed, reflecting differences in diet, mastication, and craniofacial growth.
Digital quantification methods show promise for refining wear scoring systems in paleontological and archaeological research.
Abstract
Tooth wear is increasingly recognized as an adaptive process that can help optimize mastication and maintain oral health. In this study, we apply clinical wear‐assessment methods to quantify occlusal tissue loss in first molars of seven Australian Aboriginal individuals from Yuendumu (1950s–1970s), whose diet combined traditional hunter‐gatherer foods with processed Western items. High‐resolution surface scans of dental casts were analyzed using WearCompare to assess wear patterns during dental development and evaluate the applicability of these tools in a biological anthropology context. Clinical methods designed for assessing pathological wear can effectively capture normal physiological wear in populations with medium‐high tissue loss rates. Average annual tissue loss was 4 mm3 (0.05 mm3/mm2), with the highest wear regions losing an average of 215 μm in thickness per year.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Studies · Dental materials and restorations · Paleopathology and ancient diseases
