- Sinodonty and Sundadonty
Anthropologist
Christy Turner identified two patterns, Sinodonty and Sundadonty, forEast Asia , within the "Mongoloid dental complex " [http://books.google.com/books?id=HuRcAyXWJxIC&pg=PA165&dq=dental+complex&sig=DLgOFSTm0uoEvkUoJk_eKZO3jYk#PPA177,M1] . The latter is regarded as having a more generalised,Australoid morphology and having a longer ancestry than its offspring, Sinodonty.Sino and Sunda refer to
China andSundaland , while 'dont' refers to teeth.He found the Sundadont pattern in the
Jōmon ofJapan ,Taiwanese aborigines , Filipinos,Indonesians ,Thais , Borneans,Laotians , andMalaysians , and the Sinodont pattern in the inhabitants ofChina ,Mongolia , easternSiberia , Native Americans, and theYayoi .Sinodonty is a particular pattern of
teeth common among Native Americans and some peoples inAsia , in particular the northernHan Chinese and some Japanese populations. The upper first twoincisors are not aligned with the other teeth, but rotated a few degrees inward, and, moreover, they are shovel-shaped; the upper firstpremolar has one root (whereas the upper first premolar in Caucasians has normally two roots). The lower first molar in Sinodonts has three roots (whereas it has two roots in Caucasians).In the 1990s, Turner's dental measurements were frequently mentioned as one of three new tools for studying origins and migrations of human populations. The other two were linguistic methods like
Joseph Greenberg 'smass comparison of vocabulary orJohanna Nichols 's statistical study oflanguage typology and its evolution, and genetic studies pioneered byCavalli-Sforza .Today, the largest number of references on the web to Turner's work are from discussions of the origin of
Paleo-Indians and modern Native Americans, including theKennewick Man controversy. Turner found that the dental remains of both ancient and modern Indians are more similar to each other than they are to dental complexes from other continents, but that the Sinodont patterns of the Paleoindians identify their ancestral homeland as north-east Asia. Some later studies have questioned this and found Sundadont features in some American peoples.Notes
References
*"The Anthropology of Modern Human Teeth: Dental Morphology and Its Variation in Recent Human Populations" by George Richard Scott, Christy G Turner II.; Cambridge University Press 1997; ISBN 0521784530 - [http://books.google.com/books?id=HuRcAyXWJxIC&printsec=toc&dq=Sinodont+Sundadont Google Book Search]
*"The Journey of Man" by Spencer Wells; Princeton University Press 2002; ISBN 0-691-11532-XExternal links
* [http://daphne.palomar.edu/ddozier/course_notes/concepts/histories/archaic/sinodonty.htm Sinodonty Diagram]
* [http://www.antiquityofman.com/Palaeoindian_origins.html Affinities of the Paleoindians]
* [http://www.uic.edu/classes/osci/osci590/10_1Non-Metric.htm "Tracing Native American Origins"]
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