Evidence for labret use in prehistory

Aims. Compared to occlusal dental wear, labial/buccal abrasion is seldom documented in prehistoric groups. This type of wear occurs in some ethnographic-present and living populations and leaves telltale facets on non-occlusal vestibular surfaces associated with labrets. Methods and materials. For d...

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Main Authors: David Frayer, Alessia Nava, Gianna Tartaglia, Massimo Vidale, Alfredo Coppa, Luca Bondioli
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: International Association for Paleodontology 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hrcak.srce.hr/240239
https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/348735
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spelling fthrcak:oai:hrcak.srce.hr:240239 2023-05-15T16:55:17+02:00 Evidence for labret use in prehistory David Frayer Alessia Nava Gianna Tartaglia Massimo Vidale Alfredo Coppa Luca Bondioli 2020 application/pdf https://hrcak.srce.hr/240239 https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/348735 eng eng International Association for Paleodontology https://hrcak.srce.hr/240239 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Bulletin of the International Association for Paleodontology is an Open Access journal. All content is made freely available. Users are allowed to copy and redistribute, and alter, transform, or build upon the material as long as they attribute the source in an appropriate manner. Users can not use the materials for commercial purposes without previous arrangement with the publisher. No article processing charges. No article submission charges. Bulletin of the International association for paleodontology ISSN 1846-6273 (Online) Volume 14 Issue 1 text info:eu-repo/semantics/other info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2020 fthrcak 2020-07-01T22:59:13Z Aims. Compared to occlusal dental wear, labial/buccal abrasion is seldom documented in prehistoric groups. This type of wear occurs in some ethnographic-present and living populations and leaves telltale facets on non-occlusal vestibular surfaces associated with labrets. Methods and materials. For detailed macroscopic, microscopic (binocular and SEM) and thin-sectioned analysis we focused on the early Neolithic site of Mehrgarh in Pakistan where labial/buccal wear is found in mostly older adult males. We studied 215 teeth from ten individuals from the site. From the literature and some personal observations, we review evidence from the Czech early Upper Paleolithic and many later sites in the Old and New Worlds. Results. For Mehrgarh macroscopic observations revealed numerous teeth with labial and buccal facets affecting nearly every tooth class. Binocular and scanning electron microscopy and one thin-sectioned tooth provided detailed information about the wear characteristics on the facets. Comparisons. The most striking parallels to wear at Mehrgarh come from recent Inuit and Northwest Coast Native Americans where labret use was frequent in males and females. Vestibular wear occurs in a wide variety of specimens from the early Upper Paleolithic to modern patients. Unlike Mehrgarh and earlier prehistoric groups, in many cases Native American teeth are associated with the actual labrets in the graves. Conclusion. Occlusal wear or attrition caused by dental/oral manipulations where the teeth were used as tools is different, based on the resultant facets left on the teeth and micro-wear features. In prehistoric Europe, labret use extends back, at least, to the early Upper Paleolithic. As in recent humans, the use of labrets in prehistoric groups likely represents personal adornment tied to concepts of beauty and/or achieved/acquired status. Text inuit Hrčak - Portal of scientific journals of Croatia
institution Open Polar
collection Hrčak - Portal of scientific journals of Croatia
op_collection_id fthrcak
language English
description Aims. Compared to occlusal dental wear, labial/buccal abrasion is seldom documented in prehistoric groups. This type of wear occurs in some ethnographic-present and living populations and leaves telltale facets on non-occlusal vestibular surfaces associated with labrets. Methods and materials. For detailed macroscopic, microscopic (binocular and SEM) and thin-sectioned analysis we focused on the early Neolithic site of Mehrgarh in Pakistan where labial/buccal wear is found in mostly older adult males. We studied 215 teeth from ten individuals from the site. From the literature and some personal observations, we review evidence from the Czech early Upper Paleolithic and many later sites in the Old and New Worlds. Results. For Mehrgarh macroscopic observations revealed numerous teeth with labial and buccal facets affecting nearly every tooth class. Binocular and scanning electron microscopy and one thin-sectioned tooth provided detailed information about the wear characteristics on the facets. Comparisons. The most striking parallels to wear at Mehrgarh come from recent Inuit and Northwest Coast Native Americans where labret use was frequent in males and females. Vestibular wear occurs in a wide variety of specimens from the early Upper Paleolithic to modern patients. Unlike Mehrgarh and earlier prehistoric groups, in many cases Native American teeth are associated with the actual labrets in the graves. Conclusion. Occlusal wear or attrition caused by dental/oral manipulations where the teeth were used as tools is different, based on the resultant facets left on the teeth and micro-wear features. In prehistoric Europe, labret use extends back, at least, to the early Upper Paleolithic. As in recent humans, the use of labrets in prehistoric groups likely represents personal adornment tied to concepts of beauty and/or achieved/acquired status.
format Text
author David Frayer
Alessia Nava
Gianna Tartaglia
Massimo Vidale
Alfredo Coppa
Luca Bondioli
spellingShingle David Frayer
Alessia Nava
Gianna Tartaglia
Massimo Vidale
Alfredo Coppa
Luca Bondioli
Evidence for labret use in prehistory
author_facet David Frayer
Alessia Nava
Gianna Tartaglia
Massimo Vidale
Alfredo Coppa
Luca Bondioli
author_sort David Frayer
title Evidence for labret use in prehistory
title_short Evidence for labret use in prehistory
title_full Evidence for labret use in prehistory
title_fullStr Evidence for labret use in prehistory
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for labret use in prehistory
title_sort evidence for labret use in prehistory
publisher International Association for Paleodontology
publishDate 2020
url https://hrcak.srce.hr/240239
https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/348735
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_source Bulletin of the International association for paleodontology
ISSN 1846-6273 (Online)
Volume 14
Issue 1
op_relation https://hrcak.srce.hr/240239
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Bulletin of the International Association for Paleodontology is an Open Access journal. All content is made freely available. Users are allowed to copy and redistribute, and alter, transform, or build upon the material as long as they attribute the source in an appropriate manner. Users can not use the materials for commercial purposes without previous arrangement with the publisher. No article processing charges. No article submission charges.
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