“…Over the last two decades, an increasing number of studies have documented the presence of developmental defects 1 in tooth crowns and roots of fossil hominins (e.g., Skinner, 1996;Guatelli-Steinberg, 2003, 2004Cunha et al, 2004;Guatelli-Steinberg et al, 2004;Lacruz et al, 2005;Smith et al, 2007a;Dean and Smith, 2009;reviewed in Smith, 2013;Hillson, 2014) and nonhuman primates (e.g., Guatelli-Steinberg, 2001;Dirks et al, 2002;Skinner and Hopwood, 2004;Guatelli-Steinberg and Benderlioglu, 2006;Schwartz et al, 2006;Chollet and Teaford, 2010;Dirks et al, 2010;Guatelli-Steinberg et al, 2012;Skinner and Pruetz, 2012;Skinner, 2014). External defects are known as hypoplasias, which may be pit-form, plane-form, or furrow-form disruptions (often termed linear enamel hypoplasias) (reviewed in Suckling, 1989;Goodman and Rose, 1990;Hillson, 1996;Hillson and Bond, 1997;Guatelli-Steinberg, 2001;Witzel et al, 2008;Hillson, 2014).…”