Evidence of habitual behavior from non-alimentary dental wear on deciduous teeth from the Middle and Upper Paleolithic Cantabrian region, Northern Spain
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2021Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Publicado en
Journal of Human Evolution, Volume 158, September 2021, 103047
Editorial
Elsevier
Palabras clave
Cultural striations
Chipped enamel
Toothpick grooves
Subvertical grooves
Neanderthals
Upper Paleolithic anatomically modern humans
Resumen/Abstract
The use of "teeth as tools" (non-masticatory or cultural-related dental wear) has largely been employed as
a proxy for studying of past human behavior, mainly in permanent dentition from adult individuals. Here
we present the analysis of the non-masticatory dental wear modifications on the deciduous dentition
assigned to eight Neanderthal and anatomically modern human subadult individuals from Mousterian to
Magdalenian technocultural contexts in the Cantabrian region (Northern Spain). Although preliminary,
we tentatively suggest that these eight subadults present activity-related dental wear, including cultural
striations, chipped enamel, toothpick grooves, and subvertical grooves. We also found evidence of
habitual dental hygienic practices in the form of toothpicking on a deciduous premolar. Orientation of
the cultural striations indicates similar handedness development as in modern children. Taken together,
these dental wear patterns support the participation of young individuals in group activities, making
them potential contributors to group welfare. This study potentially adds new evidence to the importance
of the use of the mouth in paramasticatory activities or as a third hand throughout the Pleistocene,
which can be confirmed with a more specific reference sample.