“…The most common type is Mx.C.P1 transposition, in which the maxillary canine erupts between the first and second maxillary premolars (Peck et al, 1993;Pindborg, 1970; but see Chattopadhyay and Srinivas, 1996). Increasingly, Mx.C.P1 transposition is thought to have a genetic component (Nelson, 1992;Peck et al, 1993;Peck and Peck, 1995), although interference from retained deciduous canines and canine migration, each possibly under genetic control, is also frequently suggested (e.g., Joshi and Bhatt, 1971;Mader and Konzelman, 1979). Transposition is found along familial lines in some pedigrees (Allen, 1967;Feichtinger et al, 1977;Newman, 1977;Payne, 1969;Peck et al, 1993, Pindborg, 1970Van Reenen, 1964).…”