Diet and Cultural Diversity in Neanderthals and Modern Humans from Dental Macrowear Analyses

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Our latest work on Diet and cultural diversity in Neanderthals and modern humans from dental macrowear analyses is finally available at Elsevier: https://www.elsevier.com/books/dental-wear-in-evolutionary-and-biocultural-contexts/schmidt/978-0-12-815599-8

It is part of a book titled Dental Wear in Evolutionay and Biocultural Contexts edited by Christopher Schmidt and James Watson.

Dental Wear in Evolutionary and Biocultural Contexts provides a single source for disseminating the current state-of-the-art research regarding dental wear across a variety of hominoid species under a number of temporal and spatial contexts. The volume begins with a brief introductory chapter addressing the general history, understandings and approaches to the study of dental wear. Remaining chapters cover dental macrowear and dental microwear. Students and professionals in anthropology, specifically paleoanthropologists, bioarcheologists, archaeologists, and primatologists will find this book to be a valuable resource. In addition, it is a helpful guide for dentists and other dental professionals interested in dental function.

Key Features

  • Covers a wide range of topics, including method and theory, macrowear and microwear in primates, and fossil hominins
  • Highlights several recent technological innovations, including occlusal fingerprinting, considerations of enamel mechanical properties, and microwear texture
  • Includes case studies from archaeological populations

Readership

Practitioners and Students in anthropology, specifically paleoanthropologists, bioarchaeologists, archaeologists, and primatologists. Supplemental text for courses in Dental Anthropology and Bioarchaeology

Table of Contents

  1. An Introduction to Dental Wear in Evolutionary and Biocultural Contexts
    2. Dental Macrowear in Catarrhine Primates: Variability Across Species
    3. Diet and Cultural Diversity in Neanderthals and Modern Humans from Dental Macrowear Analyses
    4. Macrowear and the Mechanical Behavior of Enamel
    5. The Interplay of Behavioral and Occlusal Etiologies in Aberrant Dental Wear
    6. Deconstructing Non-Carious Cervical Lesion on Teeth in Forensic Contexts
    7. Dental Microwear Texture Analysis in Bioarchaeology
    8. Dental Microwear Texture Analysis in Deciduous Teeth
    9. Stable Carbon Isotope and Molar Microwear Variability of South African Australopiths in Relation to Paleohabitats and Taxonomy
    10. Regional Variability in Diet Between Northern European and Mediterranean Neandertals: Evidence from Dental Microwear Texture Analysis
    11. Dental Microwear Texture Analyses of the Paleoamericans of Lagoa Santa, Central-Eastern Brazil

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Luca Fiorenza

Luca is Head of the Palaeodiet Research Lab and he received his Bachelor/Master degree in Natural Sciences in 2003 at La Sapienza University in Rome (Italy), and completed his PhD in Biological Sciences between the Goethe University and the Senckenberg Research Institute (Frankfurt, Germany) at the end of 2009. During his doctoral degree he was part of an outstanding multidisciplinary network called EVAN (European Virtual Anthropology Network), where he mastered cutting-edge techniques for the study of anatomical variability, including medical imaging, 3D digitisation, display, modelling and programming. Luca’s research interests mostly focus on functional morphology of the masticatory apparatus in human and non-human primates, and on the importance of the role of diet in human evolution.

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