Investigating the dentoalveolar complex in archaeological human skull specimens: Additional findings with large volume micro‐CT compared to standard methods

Author:

Gurr Angela12ORCID,Higgins Denice3ORCID,Henneberg Maciej124,Kumaratilake Jaliya12,O'Donnell Matthew Brook5,McKinnon Meghan6,Hall Kelly A.7,Brook Alan Henry38

Affiliation:

1. Discipline of Anatomy and Pathology, School of Biomedicine University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

2. Biological Anthropology and Comparative Anatomy Research Unit, School of Biomedicine University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

3. School of Dentistry University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. Institute of Evolutionary Medicine University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

5. Communication Neuroscience Laboratory, Annenberg School for Communication University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Anatomical Pathology, Laboratory Services Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. School of Public Health The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

8. Institute of Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London London UK

Abstract

AbstractArchaeological investigation of the dentoalveolar complex in situ within a human skull requires detailed measurements using non‐invasive techniques. Standard macroscopic and radiographic methods have limitations but large volume micro‐computed tomography (LV micro‐CT) scanning has the potential to acquire data at high resolution in microns. In this study, archaeological specimens are analyzed using three‐dimensional data visualization software from LV micro‐CT scans with the aims of (1) determining whether LV micro‐CT can act as a single technique to provide detailed analysis of the dentoalveolar complex and (2) how findings from the LV micro‐CT technique compare with standard methods. These aims are explored by measuring a range of human skull specimens from a rare archaeological sample requiring non‐invasive methods, for multiple dental and alveolar bone health categories. The LV micro‐CT technique was the only method to provide a full range of detailed measurements across all categories studied. A combination of macroscopic and radiographic techniques covered a number of categories, but the use of multiple methods was more time consuming, did not provide the same level of accuracy, and did not include all measurements. There were high levels of reproducibility for intra‐operator scoring and good inter‐operator agreement from four operators with one operator whose results were outliers. As a further investigation of the potential of the LV micro‐CT technique, an additional individual, a fragile, fragmented skull of an infant was studied. This investigation confirms the value of LV micro‐CT scanning as a non‐invasive, accurate, single technique for the extensive analysis of the dentoalveolar complex within archaeological skulls, which also allows the relationship of different tissues to be studied in situ.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Archeology,Anthropology,Archeology

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