“…The recent proliferation of excavations in southwest Iberia in general, and southern Portugal in particular, has greatly informed our knowledge of the Chalcolithic (3300–2200 BC) and Early/Middle Bronze Age (2200–1200 BC) archaeological contexts in the region—especially concerning the heterogeneity of funeral practices during this period (Alves et al, 2010; Filipe, Godinho, Granja, Ribeiro, & Valera, 2013; Pereira, Silva, Valera, & Porfírio, 2017a; Valério et al, 2014). Unfortunately, poor preservation of human remains has severely limited bioarchaeological reconstructions of human lifeways in southwest Iberia (Silva, Gil, Soares, & da Silva, 2017). However, among the few bioarchaeological studies from the Bronze Age of southern Portugal (Fidalgo, Porfírio, & Silva, 2016; Fidalgo & Silva, 2020; Fidalgo, Silva, & Porfírio, 2020; Pereira et al, 2017a; Pereira, Silva, & Valera, 2017b; Silva et al, 2018; Silva, Gil, Soares, & da Silva, 2016; Silva, Gil, Soares, & da Silva, 2017), patterns of dental wear related to the nonmasticatory use of the dentition for manipulative tasks have provided some of the most informative reconstructions of Bronze Age human habitual behaviours for the region (Fidalgo, Silva, & Porfírio, 2020; Pereira et al, 2017a, 2017b; Silva, Gil, Soares, & da Silva, 2016).…”