Department of Anthropology, New York University, New York, New York, USA.
New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology, New York, New York, USA.
Am J Biol Anthropol. 2024 Sep;185(1):e24985. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24985. Epub 2024 Jun 12.
Age at death estimation is a key element to many research questions in biological anthropology, archeology, and forensic science. Dental cementum is a tissue of choice for the estimation of age at death in adult individuals as it continues deposition for the entirety of an individual's life. Previous works have devised regression formulas correlating cementum thickness to age at death. However, interpopulation variances are unknown, and it is therefore not clear whether regressions based on a single population are applicable to individuals with different ancestries.
Here, we use a sample (n = 52) of teeth from individuals with known age at tooth extraction/death of European, African, and East Asian ancestry to assess whether there are interpopulations differences in cementum growth rate. We measured growth rate in four different areas (2nd and 5th decile of both the lingual and buccal aspect of the root) of each tooth and used nonparametric tests to evaluate population differences in growth rate between homologous regions of the teeth.
The results of the analyses show that, even after controlling for tooth size, individuals of European ancestry have significantly lower growth rates than those of both African and East Asian ancestry across all four tooth areas.
These results call into question the applicability of the regression formulas derived from European ancestry individuals to individuals of other ancestries.
年龄推断是生物人类学、考古学和法医学中许多研究问题的关键要素。牙骨质是推断成年人死亡年龄的首选组织,因为它在个体的整个生命周期内都在不断沉积。先前的研究已经设计出将牙骨质厚度与死亡年龄相关联的回归公式。然而,不同人群之间的差异尚不清楚,因此,基于单一人群的回归是否适用于具有不同祖先的个体尚不清楚。
在这里,我们使用了来自具有已知拔牙/死亡年龄的欧洲、非洲和东亚血统个体的牙齿样本(n=52),以评估牙骨质生长率在不同人群之间是否存在差异。我们测量了每个牙齿的四个不同区域(根部舌侧和颊侧的第 2 和第 5 个十分位数)的生长率,并使用非参数检验来评估牙齿同源区域之间人群间生长率的差异。
分析结果表明,即使在控制牙齿大小后,欧洲血统个体的生长率在所有四个牙齿区域均明显低于非洲和东亚血统个体。
这些结果质疑了从欧洲血统个体得出的回归公式在其他血统个体中的适用性。