School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7NZ, UK; Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Department of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, 72701, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2019 Aug;133:198-213. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2019.06.004. Epub 2019 Jul 12.
In apes, the mandibular third premolar (P) is adapted for a role in honing the large upper canine. The role of honing was lost early in hominin evolution, releasing the tooth from this functional constraint and allowing it to respond to subsequent changes in masticatory demands. This led to substantial morphological changes, and as such the P has featured prominently in systematic analyses of the hominin clade. The application of microtomography has also demonstrated that examination of the enamel-dentine junction (EDJ) increases the taxonomic value of variations in crown morphology. Here we use geometric morphometric techniques to analyze the shape of the P EDJ in a broad sample of fossil hominins, modern humans, and extant apes (n = 111). We test the utility of P EDJ shape for distinguishing among hominoids, address the affinities of a number of hominin specimens of uncertain taxonomic attribution, and characterize the changes in P EDJ morphology across our sample, with particular reference to features relating to canine honing and premolar 'molarization'. We find that the morphology of the P EDJ is useful in taxonomic identification of individual specimens, with a classification accuracy of up to 88%. The P EDJ of canine-honing apes displays a tall protoconid, little metaconid development, and an asymmetrical crown shape. Plio-Pleistocene hominin taxa display derived masticatory adaptations at the EDJ, such as the molarized premolars of Australopithecus africanus and Paranthropus, which have well-developed marginal ridges, an enlarged talonid, and a large metaconid. Modern humans and Neanderthals display a tall dentine body and reduced metaconid development, a morphology shared with premolars from Mauer and the Cave of Hearths. Homo naledi displays a P EDJ morphology that is unique among our sample; it is quite unlike Middle Pleistocene and recent Homo samples and most closely resembles Australopithecus, Paranthropus and early Homo specimens.
在猿类中,下颌第三前磨牙(P)适应于磨砺大型上颌犬齿的作用。在人类进化的早期,磨砺的作用就丧失了,从而使牙齿不再受到这种功能约束,并允许其对随后咀嚼需求的变化做出反应。这导致了牙齿形态的巨大变化,因此 P 在人类分支的系统分析中占据了重要地位。微断层扫描的应用还表明,检查牙釉质-牙本质交界处(EDJ)可以增加冠形态变化的分类价值。在这里,我们使用几何形态测量技术分析了化石人类、现代人类和现生猿类(n=111)的广泛样本中 P 的 EDJ 形状。我们测试了 P EDJ 形状在区分人科动物中的有用性,解决了一些分类归属不确定的人类标本的亲缘关系,并描述了我们样本中 P EDJ 形态的变化,特别是与犬齿磨砺和前磨牙“磨牙化”相关的特征。我们发现 P EDJ 的形态在个体标本的分类鉴定中是有用的,分类准确率高达 88%。具有犬齿磨砺的猿类的 P EDJ 具有高的原尖,小的后尖发育,以及不对称的冠形状。更新世人类分类单元在 EDJ 上显示出衍生的咀嚼适应性,例如具有发达的边缘脊、增大的跟座和大的后尖的南方古猿 africanus 和 Paranthropus 的磨牙化前磨牙。现代人类和尼安德特人显示出高的牙本质体和减少的后尖发育,这种形态与 Mauer 和 Hearths 洞穴的前磨牙共享。直立人 naledi 显示出在我们的样本中独一无二的 P EDJ 形态;它与中更新世和现代人类样本非常不同,最接近南方古猿、巨猿和早期人类标本。