Mammalian tooth wear research reveals contrasting patterns seemingly linked to diet: irregularly pitted enamel surfaces, possibly from consuming hard seeds, versus roughly aligned linearly grooved surfaces, associated with eating tough leaves. These patterns are important for assigning diet to fossils, including hominins. However, experiments establishing conditions necessary for such damage challenge this paradigm. Lucas et al. (Lucas et al. 2013 J. R. Soc. Interface
10, 20120923. (doi:10.1098/rsif.2012.092310.1098/rsif.2012.0923)) slid natural objects against enamel, concluding anything less hard than enamel would rub, not abrade, its surface (producing no immediate wear). This category includes all organic plant matter. Particles harder than enamel, with sufficiently angular surfaces, could abrade it immediately, prerequisites that silica/silicate particles alone possess. Xia et al. (Xia, Zheng, Huang, Tian, Chen, Zhou, Ungar, Qian. 2015 Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA
112, 10 669–10 672. (doi:10.1073/pnas.150949111210.1073/pnas.1509491112)) countered with experiments using brass and aluminium balls. Their bulk hardness was lower than enamel, but the latter was abraded. We examined the ball exteriors to address this discrepancy. The aluminium was surfaced by a thin rough oxide layer harder than enamel. Brass surfaces were smoother, but work hardening during manufacture gave them comparable or higher hardness than enamel. We conclude that Xia et al.'s results are actually predicted by the mechanical model of Lucas et al. To explain wear patterns, we present a new model of textural formation, based on particle properties and presence/absence of silica(tes).
The micro-mechanical properties of 5 μm thick histological sections of ferret aorta and vena cava were mapped as a function of distance from the outer adventitial layer using nanoindentation. In order to decouple the effect of the glass substrate on the elastic modulus of these thin sections, the nanoindentation data were analyzed using the extended Oliver and Pharr method which is readily accessible for coatings and layered materials with the software package, FilmDoctor®. In the aorta, the elastic modulus was found to decrease progressively from 35 MPa at the adventitia (outermost layer) to 8 MPa at the intima (innermost layer). This decrease in modulus was inversely correlated with elastic fibre density. In contrast, in the vena cava, the stiffest regions were found to be the adventitial (outer) and intimal (innermost) sections of the vessel cross-section. Both these regions were enriched in ECM components. The central region, thought to be largely cellular, had a relatively constant modulus of around 20 MPa. This study demonstrates that with this methodology it is possible to distinguish micro-mechanically between large arteries and veins, and therefore the same approach should allow age or disease related changes in the mechanical properties within a tissue to be quantified.
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