2014
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.22611
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Molar crown inner structural organization in Javanese Homo erectus

Abstract: This contribution investigates the inner organizational pattern (tooth tissue proportions and enamel-dentine junction morphology) of seven Homo erectus permanent molar crowns from the late Lower-early Middle Pleistocene Kabuh Formation of the Sangiran Dome (Central Java, Indonesia). The previous study of their external characteristics confirmed the degree of time-related structural reduction occurred in Javanese H. erectus, and also revealed a combination of nonmetric features which are rare in the Lower and e… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…Despite this difference, we should be cautious with interpreting it until more data is available. A M 3 from Hexian H. erectus (PA831) (unpublished data) and a M 3 from Java (NG0802.2) (see Figure 2 in Zanolli (2015)) are similar to that of recent H. sapiens in the distribution pattern of 3-D enamel thickness.…”
Section: Distribution Of 3-d Enamel Thicknesssupporting
confidence: 56%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Despite this difference, we should be cautious with interpreting it until more data is available. A M 3 from Hexian H. erectus (PA831) (unpublished data) and a M 3 from Java (NG0802.2) (see Figure 2 in Zanolli (2015)) are similar to that of recent H. sapiens in the distribution pattern of 3-D enamel thickness.…”
Section: Distribution Of 3-d Enamel Thicknesssupporting
confidence: 56%
“…In addition, LYC1 does not have as many accessory ridges as in PA834-2. The NG92.3 and NG0802.2 of Java H. erectus display an EDJ surface as simple as that of LYC1 (Zanolli, 2015). However, the EDJ surface of the other M 3 (NG9107.2) is slightly more complicated due to the development of several accessory ridges (Zanolli, 2015).…”
Section: Morphologymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…As sample sizes increased so did our understanding of ranges of variation (e.g., Smith et al, 2012), but even today the misleading elegance of such dichotomous phenotypic simplicity continues to be employed (e.g. Horvath et al, 2014;Zanolli, 2014). …”
Section: Enamel Thickness Variationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…i This study. and dentine horns enclosing a sub-concave occlusal basin commonly seen in fossil and extant hominoid molars, such as Ouranopithecus (Macchiarelli et al, 2009), Paranthropus and Australopithecus , Homo Skinner et al, 2008b;Zanolli, 2014;Zanolli and Mazurier, 2013), and in the living great apes (Skinner et al, 2008b(Skinner et al, , 2010. Assuming that Oreopithecus is closely related to the dryopithecines (Harrison and Rook, 1997;Moyà-Solà and Köhler, 1997), which almost invariably exhibit a low to only moderately elevated external crown topography (Alba et al, 2013;Begun, 2002), its tall occlusal reliefs could represent an autapomorphic feature developed under conditions of insular isolation.…”
Section: Tooth Morphostructurementioning
confidence: 99%