Europe's oldest jaw: Evidence of oral pathology

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Abstract

Atapuerca, in the north of Spain, is the archaeological site where the oldest hominid remains within Europe have been found. In 2008 a jaw fragment, corresponding to the symphyseal area, was discovered in the area called the 'Elephant's pit'. Its age has been estimated at 1.2 million years and it is considered to be the oldest human fossil found in Europe and is from the lower Pleistocene. This work analyses the dental and skeletal damage to the specimen, detected in a macroscopic study of possible horizontal and vertical bone loss at the level of support of the remaining teeth. The limited presence of dental scale, the pattern of destruction and the decreased bone density due to increased marrow spaces suggest the presence of possible periodontal disease. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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López-Valverde, A., López-Cristiá, M., & Gómez De Diego, R. (2012). Europe’s oldest jaw: Evidence of oral pathology. British Dental Journal. Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bdj.2012.176

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