Dental Anthropology

Year
1
Academic year
2023-2024
Code
02004606
Subject Area
Biological Anthropology
Language of Instruction
Portuguese
Mode of Delivery
Face-to-face
ECTS Credits
6.0
Type
Elective
Level
2nd Cycle Studies - Mestrado

Recommended Prerequisites

None

Teaching Methods

Teaching methodologies:

-  Lectures, using slides; In practical classes teeth casts and osteological collections (identified and non-identified) are used to introduce students to the practical study of dental morphology and pathology.

- Research on several topics proposed, in order to deepen and consolidate the scientific knowledge.

Learning Outcomes

This course aims to provide students with essential knowledge about the methodologies used in the study of teeth from archaeological, forensic and museological contexts. Whereas the teeth are the part best preserved after an individual's death, the analysis of the dental morphological variation, oral pathology and developmental alterations is an essential tool in the understanding of the past populations.

Work Placement(s)

No

Syllabus

•   Dental anatomy

•   Human dentition: identification of permanent and deciduous teeth

•   Non metric and metric dental traits.

•   Kinship analysis using odontological non metric traits

•   Congenital dental anomalies

•   Defects of dental enamel

•   Dental wear

•   Definition and types of dental wear

•   Progression and consequences

•   Antiquity and history

•   Registration importance

•   Oral pathology

•   Plaque related diseases, their definition and aetiology

•   Dental calculus

•   Dental caries

•   Periodontal disease

•   Periapical inflammation

•   Dental pathologies’ paleoepidemiology and registration

Head Lecturer(s)

Ana Maria Gama da Silva

Assessment Methods

Assessment
Laboratory work or Field work: 50.0%
Synthesis work: 50.0%

Bibliography

Irish, J.D., & Nelson, G.C. (2008). Technique and Application in Dental Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.

Harris, E. (2005). Tooth-coding system in the clinical dental setting. Dental Anthropology, 18(2), 43-49.

Hillson, S. (2001). Recording dental caries in archaeological human remains. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 11, 249-289.

Hillson, S. (2005). Teeth. 2ª Edição. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.

Scott, G.C., & Turner, C.G. (1997). The anthropology of modern human teeth: Dental morphology and its variation in recent human populations. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.

Turner, C.G., Nichol, C., & Scott, G.R. (1991). Scoring procedures for key morphological traits of the permanent dentition: the Arizona State University Dental Anthropology System. In M. Kelley, & C. Larsen (Eds.), Advances in Dental Anthropology (pp.13-31). New York: Wiley-Liss.