Publication | Open Access
The dawn of dentistry in the late upper Paleolithic: An early case of pathological intervention at Riparo Fredian
46
Citations
61
References
2017
Year
The results are consistent with tool-assisted manipulation to remove necrotic or infected pulp in vivo and the subsequent use of a composite, organic filling. Fredian 5 confirms the practice of dentistry-specifically, a pathology-induced intervention-among Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers. As such, it appears that fundamental perceptions of biomedical knowledge and practice were in place long before the socioeconomic changes associated with the transition to food production in the Neolithic.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1