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Extract
For thousands of years, humans have been modifying different parts of their bodies to include a range of treatments, such as application of tattoos, body-piercing, foot-binding, ring insertions, and especially in the past, head shaping (e.g., Bonogofsky, 2011). In the modern world, one has only to walk across a college campus and see some quite remarkable body treatment—hair-dyeing, tattoos, tooth-whitening (the “natural” color of teeth is not white), and the like.
Anthropologists have learned from the study of ancient human skeletal remains that some of the most elaborate modifications involve teeth, especially the labial surfaces of the upper anterior teeth—left and right incisors and canines. In this fascinating volume, editors Scott Burnett and Joel Irish and the contributing authors provide a collection of contributions documenting and exploring the remarkable range of variability in how humans have intentionally modified their teeth. There has been other coverage of the topic, but much of that literature focuses on particularistic description and deals primarily with single specimens and sites. Indeed, the focus on description has continued since the last major review of the topic published 25 years ago (see Milner and Larsen, 1991).
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