Eshed Vered, Gopher Avi, Hershkovitz Israel
Department of Anatomy and Anthropology, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2006 Jun;130(2):145-59. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20362.
Differences in patterns of diet and subsistence through the analysis of dental pathology and tooth wear were studied in skeletal populations of Natufian hunter-gatherers (10,500-8300 BC) and Neolithic populations (8300-5500 BC, noncalibrated) from the southern Levant. 1,160 Natufians and 804 Neolithic teeth were examined for rate of attrition, caries, antemortem tooth loss, calculus, periapical lesions, and periodontal processes. While the Natufian people manifest a higher rate of dental attrition and periodontal disease (36.4% vs. 19%), Neolithic people show a higher rate of calculus. Both populations manifested low and similar rates of caries (6.4% in the Natufian vs. 6.7% in the Neolithic), periapical lesions (not over 1.5%), and antemortem tooth loss (3.7% vs. 4.5%, respectively). Molar wear pattern in the Neolithic is different than in the Natufian. The current study shows that the dental picture obtained from the two populations is multifactorial in nature, and not exclusively of dietary origin, i.e., the higher rate and unique pattern of attrition seen in the Natufian could result from a greater consumption of fibrous plants, the use of pestles and mortars (which introduce large quantities of stone-dust to the food), and/or the use of teeth as a "third hand." The two major conclusions of this study are: 1) The transition from hunting and gathering to a food-producing economy in the Levant did not promote changes in dental health, as previously believed. This generally indicates that the Natufians and Neolithic people of the Levant may have differed in their ecosystem management (i.e., gathering vs. growing grains), but not in the type of food consumed. 2) Changes in food-preparation techniques and nondietary usage of the teeth explain much of the variation in tooth condition in populations before and after the agricultural revolution.
通过对牙齿病理学和牙齿磨损的分析,研究了来自黎凡特南部的纳图夫狩猎采集者(公元前10500 - 8300年)和新石器时代人群(公元前8300 - 5500年,未校准)骨骼样本中饮食和生存模式的差异。对1160颗纳图夫人和804颗新石器时代人的牙齿进行了磨损率、龋齿、生前牙齿脱落、牙石、根尖周病变和牙周病变的检查。虽然纳图夫人群表现出更高的牙齿磨损率和牙周疾病发生率(36.4%对19%),但新石器时代人群的牙石发生率更高。两个群体的龋齿(纳图夫人群为6.4%,新石器时代人群为6.7%)、根尖周病变(不超过1.5%)和生前牙齿脱落率(分别为3.7%对4.5%)都较低且相似。新石器时代的磨牙磨损模式与纳图夫人群不同。当前研究表明,从这两个人群获得的牙齿情况本质上是多因素的,并非完全源于饮食,即纳图夫人群中较高的磨损率和独特的磨损模式可能是由于更多地食用纤维植物、使用杵和臼(这会将大量石粉引入食物中),和/或用牙齿作为“第三只手”。这项研究的两个主要结论是:1)黎凡特地区从狩猎采集向粮食生产经济的转变并没有像之前认为的那样促进牙齿健康的变化。这总体表明,黎凡特的纳图夫人和新石器时代人群在生态系统管理方面(即采集与种植谷物)可能存在差异,但在食用的食物类型上没有差异。2)食物制备技术的变化和牙齿的非饮食用途解释了农业革命前后人群牙齿状况的大部分差异。