A toothless future? What anthropological studies may tell us about generations to come

K. Soileau, Laura Brailsford, Brittney Stewart, Adam E. DeGenova
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Abstract

Since teeth are the most preserved skeletal remains found in fossils, they can provide an excellent historical record about the adaptive changes that have taken place in the orthognathic complex of modern-day Homo sapiens, as well as the ways by which these evolutionary modifications have affected overall health and lifestyle through time. The study of ancestral dietary progression from trees to grasses and plains as projected through carbon dating has made possible much of today's enlightenment as to the adaptive physiologic nature that has taken place within the species. This understanding, in tandem with the observed morphological changes which have occurred in the anatomy of the teeth and the bony contours and muscle attachments of the skull and jaws in which they are housed, has elucidated present-day scientists as to the means by which the human orthognathic complex was developed, and the ways by which this likely affected overall health and lifestyle over the past millennia. Extrapolation from our current understanding of phylogenetic cause and effect as gleaned from studies of fossilized teeth and jaws to date may enable us to propose potential future anthropological dynamics and adaptations as man becomes ever more modern.
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没有牙齿的未来?人类学研究可以告诉我们关于未来几代人的信息
由于牙齿是化石中发现的保存最完好的骨骼遗骸,它们可以提供关于现代智人正颌复合体中发生的适应性变化的优秀历史记录,以及这些进化变化如何影响整体健康和生活方式。通过碳定年法对祖先从树木到草和平原的饮食演变的研究,使今天对物种内部发生的适应性生理性质的启蒙成为可能。这种理解,再加上观察到的牙齿解剖结构、骨骼轮廓以及头骨和颌骨的肌肉附着物的形态学变化,已经向当今的科学家阐明了人类正颌复合体是如何形成的,以及在过去的几千年里,这可能是如何影响整体健康和生活方式的。根据我们目前对系统发育因果关系的理解,从迄今为止对牙齿和颌骨化石的研究中收集到的推断,可能使我们能够提出潜在的未来人类学动态和适应,因为人类变得越来越现代。
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