PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Is it health or the burial environment: differentiating between hypomineralised and post-mortem stained enamel in an archaeological context.

  • Samantha McKay,
  • Rami Farah,
  • Jonathan M Broadbent,
  • Nancy Tayles,
  • Sian E Halcrow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064573
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. e64573

Abstract

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Developmental enamel defects are often used as indicators of general health in past archaeological populations. However, it can be difficult to macroscopically distinguish subtle hypomineralised opacities from post-mortem staining, unrelated to developmental defects. To overcome this difficulty, we have used non-destructive x-ray microtomography to estimate the mineral density of enamel. Using a sample of deciduous teeth from a prehistoric burial site in Northeast Thailand, we demonstrate that it is possible to determine whether observed enamel discolourations were more likely to be true hypomineralised lesions or artefacts occurring as the result of taphonomic effects. The analyses of our sample showed no evidence of hypomineralised areas in teeth with macroscopic discolouration, which had previously been thought, on the basis of macroscopic observation, to be hypomineralisations indicative of growth disruption. Our results demonstrate that x-ray microtomography can be a powerful, non-destructive method for the investigation of the presence and severity of hypomineralisation, and that diagnosis of enamel hypomineralisation based on macroscopic observation of buried teeth should be made with caution. This method makes it possible to identify true dental defects that are indicative of growth disruptions.