Olejniczak Anthony J, Smith Tanya M, Feeney Robin N M, Macchiarelli Roberto, Mazurier Arnaud, Bondioli Luca, Rosas Antonio, Fortea Javier, de la Rasilla Marco, Garcia-Tabernero Antonio, Radovcić Jakov, Skinner Matthew M, Toussaint Michel, Hublin Jean-Jacques
Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany.
J Hum Evol. 2008 Jul;55(1):12-23. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2007.11.004. Epub 2008 Mar 5.
The thickness of dental enamel is often discussed in paleoanthropological literature, particularly with regard to differences in growth, health, and diet between Neandertals and modern humans. Paleoanthropologists employ enamel thickness in paleodietary and taxonomic studies regarding earlier hominins, but variation in enamel thickness within the genus Homo has not been thoroughly explored despite its potential to discriminate species and its relevance to studies of growth and development. Radiographic two-dimensional studies indicate that Neandertal molar enamel is thin relative to the thick enamel of modern humans, although such methods have limited accuracy. Here we show that, measured via accurate high-resolution microtomographic imaging, Neandertal molar enamel is absolutely and relatively thinner than modern human enamel at most molar positions. However, this difference relates to the ratio of coronal dentine volume to total crown volume, rather than the quantity of enamel per se. The absolute volume of Neandertal molar enamel is similar to that of modern humans, but Neandertal enamel is deposited over a larger volume of coronal dentine, resulting in lower average (and relative) enamel thickness values. Sample sizes do not permit rigorous intragroup comparisons, but Neandertal molar tissue proportions evince less variation than the modern human sample. Differences in three- and two-dimensional enamel thickness data describing Neandertal molars may be explained by dimensional reduction. Although molar tissue proportions distinguish Neanderthals from recent Homo sapiens, additional study is necessary to assess trends in tissue proportions in the genus Homo throughout the Pleistocene.
牙釉质的厚度在古人类学文献中经常被讨论,特别是关于尼安德特人与现代人类在生长、健康和饮食方面的差异。古人类学家在关于早期人类的古饮食和分类学研究中采用牙釉质厚度,但尽管牙釉质厚度的差异有区分物种的潜力且与生长发育研究相关,但智人属内部牙釉质厚度的变化尚未得到充分探索。二维放射学研究表明,相对于现代人类较厚的牙釉质,尼安德特人的臼齿牙釉质较薄,尽管这些方法的准确性有限。在此我们表明,通过精确的高分辨率显微断层成像测量,在大多数臼齿位置,尼安德特人的臼齿牙釉质在绝对和相对厚度上都比现代人类的牙釉质薄。然而,这种差异与冠部牙本质体积与整个牙冠体积的比例有关,而不是牙釉质本身的数量。尼安德特人臼齿牙釉质的绝对体积与现代人类相似,但尼安德特人的牙釉质沉积在更大体积的冠部牙本质上,导致平均(和相对)牙釉质厚度值较低。样本量不允许进行严格的组内比较,但尼安德特人臼齿组织比例的变化比现代人类样本小。描述尼安德特人臼齿的三维和二维牙釉质厚度数据的差异可能是由维度缩减所解释的。尽管臼齿组织比例将尼安德特人与现代智人区分开来,但仍需要进一步研究来评估整个更新世智人属内组织比例的趋势。