“…However, differences in the quality of the environment during the complex process of odontogenesis (e.g., malnutrition, disease, climate, subsistence patterns, other negative factors) might influence tooth size and morphology, and ultimately early death occurs among the most susceptible members of the population (Riga, Belcastro, & Moggi‐Cecchi, 2014; Stojanowski, Larsen, Tung, & McEwan, 2007). Several studies have related skeletal manifestations of biological stress to the reduction in size of the permanent teeth as a result of the early deaths of nonadult individuals (Conceição & Cardoso, 2011; Stojanowski et al, 2007; Ządzińska, Lorkiewicz, Kurek, & Borowska‐Strugińska, 2015). Although a link has been suggested between reduced tooth size and physiological stressors in nonadult individuals (Guagliardo, 1982; Simpson, Hutchinson, & Larsen, 1990; Stojanowski, 2005; Stojanowski et al, 2007), any correspondence between nonadults mortality bias and the pathological indicators of poor health has been inconsistent and sporadic between different populations (Cardoso, 2008; Stojanowski et al, 2007).…”