Book contents
- Anthropological Perspectives on Tooth Morphology
- Series page
- Anthropological Perspectives on Tooth Morphology
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Bite marks in tule quids:
- 3 Twin and family studies of human dental crown morphology:
- 4 Teeth, morphogenesis, and levels of variation in the human Carabelli trait
- 5 The expression of human sex chromosome genes in oral and craniofacial growth
- 6 Significant among-population associations found between dental characters and environmental factors
- 7 Using geometric morphometrics to study the mechanisms that pattern primate dental variation
- 8 Evolution of hominin postcanine macromorphology: a comparative meta-analysis
- 9 Dental morphology of European Middle Pleistocene populations
- 10 What does it mean to be dentally “modern”?
- 11 From outer to inner structural morphology in dental anthropology: integration of the third dimension in the visualization and quantitative analysis of fossil remains
- 12 Afridonty:
- 13 Basque dental morphology and the “Eurodont” dental pattern
- 14 A first look at the dental morphometrics of early Palauans
- 15 Grades, gradients, and geography:
- 16 Do all Asians look alike? A dental nonmetric analysis of population diversity at the dawn of the Chinese empire (770 BC–AD 420)
- 17 Sinodonty and beyond:
- 18 Crown morphology of Malay deciduous teeth:
- 19 Geographic structure of dental variation in the major human populations of the world
- 20 New approaches to the use of dental morphology in forensic contexts
- 21 Wear’s the problem? Examining the effect of dental wear on studies of crown morphology
- Index
19 - Geographic structure of dental variation in the major human populations of the world
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2013
- Anthropological Perspectives on Tooth Morphology
- Series page
- Anthropological Perspectives on Tooth Morphology
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Bite marks in tule quids:
- 3 Twin and family studies of human dental crown morphology:
- 4 Teeth, morphogenesis, and levels of variation in the human Carabelli trait
- 5 The expression of human sex chromosome genes in oral and craniofacial growth
- 6 Significant among-population associations found between dental characters and environmental factors
- 7 Using geometric morphometrics to study the mechanisms that pattern primate dental variation
- 8 Evolution of hominin postcanine macromorphology: a comparative meta-analysis
- 9 Dental morphology of European Middle Pleistocene populations
- 10 What does it mean to be dentally “modern”?
- 11 From outer to inner structural morphology in dental anthropology: integration of the third dimension in the visualization and quantitative analysis of fossil remains
- 12 Afridonty:
- 13 Basque dental morphology and the “Eurodont” dental pattern
- 14 A first look at the dental morphometrics of early Palauans
- 15 Grades, gradients, and geography:
- 16 Do all Asians look alike? A dental nonmetric analysis of population diversity at the dawn of the Chinese empire (770 BC–AD 420)
- 17 Sinodonty and beyond:
- 18 Crown morphology of Malay deciduous teeth:
- 19 Geographic structure of dental variation in the major human populations of the world
- 20 New approaches to the use of dental morphology in forensic contexts
- 21 Wear’s the problem? Examining the effect of dental wear on studies of crown morphology
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Anthropological Perspectives on Tooth MorphologyGenetics, Evolution, Variation, pp. 479 - 509Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013
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