Dental wear in a marine economy: A case study from Philistine Ashkelon

Author:

Kalisher Rachel1ORCID,Master Daniel M.2ORCID,Bailey Shara E.3ORCID,Bromage Timothy G.34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

2. Wheaton Archaeology Museum Wheaton College Wheaton Illinois USA

3. Department of Anthropology New York University New York New York USA

4. Department of Molecular Pathobiology, College of Dentistry New York University New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractIn the Iron Age IIA Philistine cemetery at Ashkelon (modern Israel), roughly 11% of individuals exhibit severe and highly variable dental wear, which we explore here at two timescales: wear that accumulates over days and weeks (microwear) and wear that accumulates over months and years (macrowear). Using teeth from both adult and nonadult individuals, we first established categories of dental macrowear patterns and sorted individuals within them. We then made replicas of the teeth from 27 individuals having both typical and atypical dental wear and performed metrology by noncontact profilometry on a reflected light microscope. We then calculated each tooth's surface roughness (Sa) and collected qualitative observations of teeth within each macrowear category. Our findings show no macrowear or microwear pattern exclusive to sex or age group. Likewise, there are no statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) in Sa between adult males and females, and sampled nonadults fall within two standard deviations of the pooled adult means. The microscopic surfaces of all teeth show a wide variety of textures on the occlusal surfaces, including wavy striations, deep parallel striations, globular pitting, and newly described rectangular pits. These results indicate that individuals used their teeth as a third hand while manipulating objects and that children also participated in these activities. Due to the similarities in dental wear between Ashkelon and other coastal populations, we conclude that the observed wear patterns arose from the performance of specialized tasks for a marine‐based economy.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Archeology,Anthropology,Archeology

Reference76 articles.

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5. Continuity or discontinuity of the life-style in central Italy during the Roman imperial age-early middle ages transition: Diet, health, and behavior

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