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A study of the taxonomic significance of the dental arch
12
Citations
7
References
1977
Year
PrimatologyBiostratigraphyAnatomyPrimate SystematicsSixteen DimensionsTaxonomic SignificanceDental MorphologyBioarchaeologyBiostatisticsPrimate BehaviorLanguage StudiesMonkey SamplesPaleoanthropologyPrimate FossilMandibular Arch DimensionsHuman EvolutionEvolutionary BiologyOral BiologyAnthropologyTaxonomy (Biology)Medicine
Sixteen dimensions were measured from the maxillary and mandibular dental arches of different ethnic groups of man, apes and monkeys. Multivariate analysis showed that discrimination was possible among the ethnic groups of man on the one hand and between the ape and monkey samples on the other. Nevertheless, the actual degree of discrimination between the primate samples depended upon whether the maxillary or mandibular arch dimensions were analysed. Furthermore, subsequent inclusion of the dental arch dimensions of fossil hominoid samples into the analysis confirmed the taxonomic significance of the dental arch, although its importance must await the acquisition of the more non-human primate data.
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