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32 - Lower Molar Cusp Number

from Part II - Crown and Root Trait Descriptions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2017

G. Richard Scott
Affiliation:
University of Nevada, Reno
Joel D. Irish
Affiliation:
Liverpool John Moores University
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Summary

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Chapter
Information
Human Tooth Crown and Root Morphology
The Arizona State University Dental Anthropology System
, pp. 189 - 194
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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References

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Cope, E.D. (1874). On the homologies and origin of the types of molar teeth in Mammalia educabilia. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia 8, 7189.Google Scholar
Cope, E.D. (1888). On the tritubercular molar in human dentition. Journal of Morphology 2, 726.Google Scholar
Dahlberg, A.A. (1961). Relationship of tooth size to cusp number and groove conformation of occlusal surface patterns of lower molar teeth. Journal of Dental Research 40, 3438.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Davies, P.L. (1968). Relationship of cusp reduction in the permanent mandibular first molar to agenesis of teeth. Journal of Dental Research 47, 499.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gregory, W.K. (1916). Studies on the evolution of the primates. I. The Cope–Osborn “theory of trituberculy” and the ancestral molar patterns of the Primates. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 35, 239257.Google Scholar
Gregory, W.K. (1922). The Origin and Evolution of the Human Dentition. Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins.Google Scholar
Gregory, W.K. (1934). A half century of trituberculy: the Cope–Osborn theory of dental evolution with a revised summary of molar evolution from fish to man. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 73, 169317.Google Scholar
Gregory, W.K., and Hellman, M. (1926). The dentition of Dryopithecus and the origin of man. American Museum of Natural History Anthropological Papers 28, 1117.Google Scholar
Osborn, H.F. (1897). Trituberculy: a review dedicated to the late Professor Cope. American Naturalist 31, 9931016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, G.R., and Turner, C.G., II (1997). The Anthropology of Modern Human Teeth: Dental Morphology and its Variation in Recent Human Populations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, C.G. II, Nichol, C.R., and Scott, G.R. (1991). Scoring procedures for key morphological traits of the permanent dentition: the Arizona State University dental anthropology system. In Advances in Dental Anthropology, ed. Kelley, M.A. and Larsen, C.S.. New York: Wiley-Liss, pp. 1331.Google Scholar

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