Dental Analysis in Archaeology





Kelli- a local student found this and her teacher sent it to me:

Dental Analysis in Archaeology

Thanks Kelli!  That's an interesting site with an overview of what archaeologists and biological anthropologists can learn from dentition as well as some links to other articles and resources.

Teeth of course are the hardest bones in the body and the ones most likely to fossilize, so they are more common than other fossils.  They are also some of the most useful, because in general, you can learn a lot more from teeth than any other bone I can think of.  A single tooth can identify a species, in some cases, to say nothing of what we can learn about diet from them.

Kudos to this dental practice for spreading the word about dental archaeology!


While we are on the subject- here are two more sites to check out:

It’s the Tooth: Dental Remains & ArchaeologyASOR blog- American Schools of Oriental Research-Boston University

http://www.wikiarc.org/teeth



Probably the biggest news in biological anthropology for the year...



Okay, every year (or so) there is a "BIG STORY" in paleoanthropology that usually revolves around a fossil (sometimes it's a genetic study) and increasingly it's the publication of a paper (finally!) that analyzes a fossil that was actually found years ago.

This week people started talking about a skull that was found 8 years ago at the site of Dmanisi (Pronounced "Dee-man-EE-see) in the Republic of Georgia (in the Caucusus Mountains- a former member of the Soviet Union, not the state in the American South).  Really, the story is about how one skull fits in with several other skulls that had been discovered there, and the answer is "not very well."  Taken together, the five hominid skulls found at one site all look very different from each other although they are all found in the same place in pretty much the same geological instant, so the interpretation is that there was a LOT more variability in species during the paleolithic than many at first thought.

For years there has been a battle between "Lumpers" (people who emphasize similarities and therefore lump fossils together as part of the same species) and "splitters" (people who emphasize discontinuities in the fossil record and split them into many different species).  Taken together, the Dmanisi fossils give a lot of creedence to the lumpers, but to the splitters... eh- not so much.

On top of that there is the question of the "Multiregional hypothesis" that competes with the "Out of Africa hypothesis."  The Out of Africa hypothesis states that modern humans evolved in Africa and spread out subsequently, replacing populations of archaic Homo in Asia and Europe.  The multiregional hypothesis (sometimes called "regional continuity") claims that ancestral Homo species were one giant gene pool and advantageous genes in one geographic area would spread to others via gene flow, but local populations might retain regional variations.

The takeaway (from MY perspective):  Lumpers look pretty good here, although it would be a dream come true to find a similar site in Africa to show such variability.  I'm still not convinced that there was only one species in east Africa 2 million years ago.  I've (mostly) been a lumper since I started studying this stuff though.  I have to admit that the miltiregional hypothesis seems to come out on top with this find, although I think the genetic evidence has really given the edge to the African origin hypothesis over the past ten years or so.

Never a dull moment in this field!  Here are stories about the find from some of the major players in the mainstream media.

The New York Times' take:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/18/science/fossil-skull-may-rewrite-humans-evolutionary-story.html?_r=1&hp&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1382036967-uVGQOLIVXjaActXANk%2Fc2g

The BBC's take:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24564375

Nat Geo's Take:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2013/10/131017-skull-human-origins-dmanisi-georgia-erectus/


Time and Space in perspective...

Here are interesting vantage points from which to view ourselves (as individuals, as well as a species) in time and space

Space (this is extremely cool):
http://www.htwins.net/scale2/

Here's a different take on basically the same idea:
http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/scienceopticsu/powersof10/

Time (This is merely very, very cool):
http://waitbutwhy.com/2013/08/putting-time-in-perspective.html
























Scotland the Free? Wallonia the Brave?

The latest on what may be the next big change on the world map:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/03/opinion/does-scotland-want-independence.html?src=un&feedurl=http%3A%2F%2Fjson8.nytimes.com%2Fpages%2Fopinion%2Findex.jsonp















The article mentions "Wallons" in Belgium- here are a couple of resources on that (although not quite au current)
From TIME magazine, 2010:  http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2000517,00.html

From one of my favorite blogs- Strange Maps (2006):  http://bigthink.com/strange-maps/14-what-will-happen-after-belgium

Gender roles on their head

Here's a short film that shows women and men switching roles in the face of some typical scenes of what is conventionally understood as "sexy" from a male perspective.  Very interesting, and from one male perspective (mine), it's a bit painful to watch.

http://screen.yahoo.com/flip-side-sexy-030000502.html?utm_source=taboola

Now, it would be interesting to see the same reversal done, only with what WOMEN find sexy.