Neanderthal tooth shows earliest evidence of dentistry

A 59,000-year-old tooth from a Siberian cave reveals that Neanderthals drilled into cavities to treat decay. The discovery pushes back the origins of dentistry by tens of thousands of years. Researchers identified clear marks from stone tools on the molar.

The lower second molar was found in the Altai mountains of south-western Siberia. It features three overlapping drilled depressions that reached the pulp chamber. Scientists from the Russian Academy of Sciences concluded the work was deliberate and performed with pointed stone tools made of jasper.

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A new analysis of primate teeth suggests that grooves once attributed to ancient tooth-picking may form naturally instead. Researchers also found no signs of a common modern dental issue in wild primates.

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Researchers have analyzed mitochondrial DNA from eight Neanderthal teeth found in Stajnia Cave in Poland, reconstructing the genetic profile of a small group that lived there around 100,000 years ago. The study, published in Current Biology, marks the first such multi-individual genetic picture from a single site north of the Carpathians. The findings show genetic links to Neanderthals across Europe and the Caucasus.

Protein analysis of 23 fossil teeth shows every Homo naledi individual recovered from the Rising Star cave system was biologically female, researchers reported.

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A high-altitude cave in the eastern Pyrenees has yielded signs of repeated prehistoric occupation spanning thousands of years, including possible early copper mining and the remains of a child.

 

 

 

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