Departamento de Ingeniería Mecánica, Energética y de los Materiales, Universidad de Extremadura, 06006 Badajoz, Spain.
Department of Biology, Saint Michael's College, Colchester, VT 05439, USA.
Biol Lett. 2020 Aug;16(8):20200498. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2020.0498. Epub 2020 Aug 26.
Teeth of omnivores face a formidable evolutionary challenge: how to protect against fracture and abrasive wear caused by the wide variety of foods they process. It is hypothesized that this challenge is met in part by adaptations in enamel microstructure. The low-crowned teeth of humans and some other omnivorous mammals exhibit multiple fissures running longitudinally along the outer enamel walls, yet remain intact. It is proposed that inter-prism weakness and enamel property gradation act together to avert entry of these fissures into vulnerable inner tooth regions and, at the same time, confer wear resistance at the occlusal surface. A simple indentation experiment is employed to quantify crack paths and energetics in human enamel, and an extended-finite-element model to evaluate longitudinal crack growth histories. Consideration is given as to how tooth microstructure may have played a vital role in human evolution, and by extension to other omnivorous mammals.
如何防止因处理各种不同食物而导致的断裂和磨损。据推测,这种挑战部分是通过牙釉质微观结构的适应性来应对的。人类和其他一些杂食性哺乳动物的低冠牙齿呈现出沿外釉质壁纵向延伸的多条裂缝,但仍然完好无损。有人提出,棱柱体之间的弱点和釉质性质的渐变共同作用,防止这些裂缝进入脆弱的内部牙齿区域,同时在咬合面提供耐磨性。采用简单的压痕实验来量化人釉质中的裂纹路径和能量,以及扩展有限元模型来评估纵向裂纹扩展历史。考虑到牙齿微观结构在人类进化中可能起到了至关重要的作用,以及对其他杂食性哺乳动物的影响。