Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and hominins

Dental microwear has proven to be a valuable tool for reconstructing diets of fossil vertebrates. However, recent studies have suggested that the pattern of microscopic scratches and pits on teeth may be more reflective of environmental grit than of food preferences. Could differences in dental microwear between early hominins, for example, therefore be a result of dust level rather than of diet? We investigated this possibility using a palaeocommunity approach. We compared microwear texture differences between eastern and southern African Hominini, along with Plio-Pleistocene specimens representing two tribes of bovids, Alcelaphini and Antilopini, from the same deposits as the early hominins. If exogenous grit swamps diet signals, we would expect community-wide microwear patterns separating samples by region. Results indicate that each of the three tribes shows a different pattern of variation of microwear textures between eastern and southern Africa. These results imply that differences in microwear reflect diet rather than grit load, and that microwear can provide valuable information not just about environmental dust level, but about food preferences of fossil vertebrates.

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Main Authors: Ungar,Peter S., Scott,Jessica R., Steininger,Christine M.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2016
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532016000200022
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spelling oai:scielo:S0038-235320160002000222016-04-13Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and homininsUngar,Peter S.Scott,Jessica R.Steininger,Christine M. grit diet habitat fossil ruminants tooth wear Dental microwear has proven to be a valuable tool for reconstructing diets of fossil vertebrates. However, recent studies have suggested that the pattern of microscopic scratches and pits on teeth may be more reflective of environmental grit than of food preferences. Could differences in dental microwear between early hominins, for example, therefore be a result of dust level rather than of diet? We investigated this possibility using a palaeocommunity approach. We compared microwear texture differences between eastern and southern African Hominini, along with Plio-Pleistocene specimens representing two tribes of bovids, Alcelaphini and Antilopini, from the same deposits as the early hominins. If exogenous grit swamps diet signals, we would expect community-wide microwear patterns separating samples by region. Results indicate that each of the three tribes shows a different pattern of variation of microwear textures between eastern and southern Africa. These results imply that differences in microwear reflect diet rather than grit load, and that microwear can provide valuable information not just about environmental dust level, but about food preferences of fossil vertebrates.Academy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science v.112 n.3-4 20162016-04-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532016000200022en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-za
tag revista
region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Ungar,Peter S.
Scott,Jessica R.
Steininger,Christine M.
spellingShingle Ungar,Peter S.
Scott,Jessica R.
Steininger,Christine M.
Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and hominins
author_facet Ungar,Peter S.
Scott,Jessica R.
Steininger,Christine M.
author_sort Ungar,Peter S.
title Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and hominins
title_short Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and hominins
title_full Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and hominins
title_fullStr Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and hominins
title_full_unstemmed Dental microwear differences between eastern and southern African fossil bovids and hominins
title_sort dental microwear differences between eastern and southern african fossil bovids and hominins
description Dental microwear has proven to be a valuable tool for reconstructing diets of fossil vertebrates. However, recent studies have suggested that the pattern of microscopic scratches and pits on teeth may be more reflective of environmental grit than of food preferences. Could differences in dental microwear between early hominins, for example, therefore be a result of dust level rather than of diet? We investigated this possibility using a palaeocommunity approach. We compared microwear texture differences between eastern and southern African Hominini, along with Plio-Pleistocene specimens representing two tribes of bovids, Alcelaphini and Antilopini, from the same deposits as the early hominins. If exogenous grit swamps diet signals, we would expect community-wide microwear patterns separating samples by region. Results indicate that each of the three tribes shows a different pattern of variation of microwear textures between eastern and southern Africa. These results imply that differences in microwear reflect diet rather than grit load, and that microwear can provide valuable information not just about environmental dust level, but about food preferences of fossil vertebrates.
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
publishDate 2016
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532016000200022
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AT scottjessicar dentalmicroweardifferencesbetweeneasternandsouthernafricanfossilbovidsandhominins
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