Dental Evidence on the Origins of the Ainu and Japanese
- 3 September 1976
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 193 (4256) , 911-913
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.781841
Abstract
New dental anthropological evidence on the questions of Ainu and Japanese origins illustrates the utility of diachronic dental information obtained from skeletal populations for microevolutionary and human origins investigations. Data from skeletal and dental collections of Shang Dynasty Chinese and from Jomon period and recent Ainu Japanese, together with information on recent Japanese dentition from published accounts, indicate a correlation between the ancient Chinese and modern Japanese and between the prehistoric Jomon people and the Ainu.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Additional features of Ainu dentition. V. Peopling of the pacificAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1977
- Dental Variation Among PopulationsDental Clinics of North America, 1975
- Labial Surface Pattern on Permanent Upper Incisors of the JapaneseJournal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon, 1965
- Shovel‐shaped incisors among the living PolynesiansAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1964
- On the Occlusal Surface Patterns of Cusps of Maxillary Molars in Recent JapaneseJournal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon, 1956
- On the "Dryopithecns Pattern" in Recent JapaneseJournal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon, 1956
- On the "Tuberculum accesorium mediale internum " in Recent JapaneseJournal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon, 1956