An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups

The morphologic characteristics of the oral cavity in five contemporary Western Indian and Alaskan Eskimo groups have been investigated by the use of study models of the dental archs. The sample consisted of 216 individuals, including 44 Navajos, 43 Apaches, 40 Papagos, 42 Pimas and 47 Alaskan Eskim...

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Main Author: Matis, John A.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: TheScholarsRepository@LLU: Digital Archive of Research, Scholarship & Creative Works 1967
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/2184
https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/context/etd/article/3122/viewcontent/Matis__John_A.pdf
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spelling ftlomalindauniv:oai:scholarsrepository.llu.edu:etd-3122 2024-04-14T08:11:11+00:00 An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups Matis, John A. 1967-06-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/2184 https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/context/etd/article/3122/viewcontent/Matis__John_A.pdf English eng TheScholarsRepository@LLU: Digital Archive of Research, Scholarship & Creative Works https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/2184 https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/context/etd/article/3122/viewcontent/Matis__John_A.pdf This title appears here courtesy of the author, who has granted Loma Linda University a limited, non-exclusive right to make this publication available to the public. The author retains all other copyrights. Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects Anatomy Design of Experiments and Sample Surveys Investigative Techniques Orthodontics and Orthodontology Race and Ethnicity text 1967 ftlomalindauniv 2024-03-21T15:51:36Z The morphologic characteristics of the oral cavity in five contemporary Western Indian and Alaskan Eskimo groups have been investigated by the use of study models of the dental archs. The sample consisted of 216 individuals, including 44 Navajos, 43 Apaches, 40 Papagos, 42 Pimas and 47 Alaskan Eskimos. The first purpose of the study was to determine the extent of investigator error. This was accomplished by remeasuring many morphologic traits of the dentition in 125 Indians which had previously been measured by different investigators using the same study models. It was found that investigator error can be significant, even in objective type measurement, confirming the work of Kuzma and Zwemer. The second purpose of the study was to determine the possibility of differentiating between these five groups on the basis of their dentition. By utilizing nine separate measurements of the models, it was found that with a stepwise discriminate analysis, individuals within the four Indian tribes could be properly classified by group 60% of the time. The Alaskan Eskimo can be properly classified, by only the use of study models, 100% of the time in both group and sex. Overall, the sex of the individuals whose study models are measured, can be accurately determined at a 100% incidence. The third purpose of this study was to determine to what extent the specific traits of the "Mongoloid Master Pattern", as proposed by Moorrees, are found in these five groups. The four Indian tribes had an average shovel depth of over 1 mm, with a high incidence of occurrence, to conform to the pattern. The Eskimos had comparatively less shovel, but a large smooth concavity on the lingual of the incisors, without mesial or distal marginal ridges. As Koski and Hautala (1952) found a 76% incidence of shoveling in their Caucasian sample, it would appear to be more proper to describe a larger depth of shoveling in Mongoloids rather than a larger incidence of occurrence, although it technically is true. All of the five groups studied closely ... Text eskimo* Loma Linda University: TheScholarsRepository@LLU Hautala ENVELOPE(27.150,27.150,65.600,65.600) Indian Koski ENVELOPE(29.809,29.809,65.894,65.894)
institution Open Polar
collection Loma Linda University: TheScholarsRepository@LLU
op_collection_id ftlomalindauniv
language English
topic Anatomy
Design of Experiments and Sample Surveys
Investigative Techniques
Orthodontics and Orthodontology
Race and Ethnicity
spellingShingle Anatomy
Design of Experiments and Sample Surveys
Investigative Techniques
Orthodontics and Orthodontology
Race and Ethnicity
Matis, John A.
An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups
topic_facet Anatomy
Design of Experiments and Sample Surveys
Investigative Techniques
Orthodontics and Orthodontology
Race and Ethnicity
description The morphologic characteristics of the oral cavity in five contemporary Western Indian and Alaskan Eskimo groups have been investigated by the use of study models of the dental archs. The sample consisted of 216 individuals, including 44 Navajos, 43 Apaches, 40 Papagos, 42 Pimas and 47 Alaskan Eskimos. The first purpose of the study was to determine the extent of investigator error. This was accomplished by remeasuring many morphologic traits of the dentition in 125 Indians which had previously been measured by different investigators using the same study models. It was found that investigator error can be significant, even in objective type measurement, confirming the work of Kuzma and Zwemer. The second purpose of the study was to determine the possibility of differentiating between these five groups on the basis of their dentition. By utilizing nine separate measurements of the models, it was found that with a stepwise discriminate analysis, individuals within the four Indian tribes could be properly classified by group 60% of the time. The Alaskan Eskimo can be properly classified, by only the use of study models, 100% of the time in both group and sex. Overall, the sex of the individuals whose study models are measured, can be accurately determined at a 100% incidence. The third purpose of this study was to determine to what extent the specific traits of the "Mongoloid Master Pattern", as proposed by Moorrees, are found in these five groups. The four Indian tribes had an average shovel depth of over 1 mm, with a high incidence of occurrence, to conform to the pattern. The Eskimos had comparatively less shovel, but a large smooth concavity on the lingual of the incisors, without mesial or distal marginal ridges. As Koski and Hautala (1952) found a 76% incidence of shoveling in their Caucasian sample, it would appear to be more proper to describe a larger depth of shoveling in Mongoloids rather than a larger incidence of occurrence, although it technically is true. All of the five groups studied closely ...
format Text
author Matis, John A.
author_facet Matis, John A.
author_sort Matis, John A.
title An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups
title_short An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups
title_full An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups
title_fullStr An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups
title_full_unstemmed An Odontometric Study of Five Contemporary Western United States Indian and Alaskan Eskimo Groups
title_sort odontometric study of five contemporary western united states indian and alaskan eskimo groups
publisher TheScholarsRepository@LLU: Digital Archive of Research, Scholarship & Creative Works
publishDate 1967
url https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/2184
https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/context/etd/article/3122/viewcontent/Matis__John_A.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(27.150,27.150,65.600,65.600)
ENVELOPE(29.809,29.809,65.894,65.894)
geographic Hautala
Indian
Koski
geographic_facet Hautala
Indian
Koski
genre eskimo*
genre_facet eskimo*
op_source Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects
op_relation https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/2184
https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/context/etd/article/3122/viewcontent/Matis__John_A.pdf
op_rights This title appears here courtesy of the author, who has granted Loma Linda University a limited, non-exclusive right to make this publication available to the public. The author retains all other copyrights.
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