Japanese tooth size: Past and present
- 1 December 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Physical Anthropology
- Vol. 59 (4) , 399-411
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330590410
Abstract
Mesial‐distal and buccal‐lingual crown measurements were made on male and female samples of recent Japanese teeth from three locations, Fukuoka, Kyoto, and Tokyo, and for Hokkaido Ainu and Koreans. Similar data were collected for prehistoric Middle‐to‐Late Jomon Japanese and from Yayoi specimens representing the first agriculturalists to appear in Japan. From a tooth‐by‐tooth comparison of cross‐sectional areas, it was shown that the modern Japanese samples did not differ from one part of Japan to another. Korean tooth size also is not significantly different from Japanese, while Ainu have the smallest teeth recorded in Asia. The Yayoi who brought rice to Japan about 300 B.C. came in with teeth that were the same size as Chinese Neolithic teeth. They encountered a resident Jomon population whose teeth were 10% smaller. From tooth size measures alone, it is most economical to suggest that, if the rates of reduction observed elsewhere in the world applied in Japan, the recent Ainu would best be regarded as the direct descendants of the Jomon, while the modern Japanese are the results of in situ reduction from the incoming Yayoi. Other aspects of craniofacial morphology suggest that some Jomon was incorporated by the Yayoi. The modern Japanese, then, while predominantly derived from the Yayoi, would include a Jomon component.Keywords
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