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2. A 5,500-year-old artificial human tooth from Egypt: a historical note.

4. Do nuclear DNA and dental nonmetric data produce similar reconstructions of regional population history? An example from modern coastal Kenya

5. Preliminary reports on the 2016-2017 excavation of the Neolithic ossuary and terrace

6. Big Brains and Small Teeth: a primate comparative approach to dental and mandibular reduction in hominins

7. Characterizing Evulsion in the Later Stone Age Maghreb: Chronology and Significance

8. Ancient Celts: A reconsideration of Celtic Identity through dental nonmetric trait analysis

9. Dental pathology, wear and developmental defects in South African hominins

10. Double Teeth and Coexistent Anomalies: Examples From Continental Africa.

11. From hunter-gatherers to food producers: New dental insights into the Nile Valley population history (Late Paleolithic-Neolithic).

12. Agenesis of the permanent teeth in sub-Saharan Africans: Prevalence, patterns, interpretations.

13. Sex-biased sampling may influence Homo naledi tooth size variation.

14. High frequency of dental caries and calculus in dentitions from a British medieval town.

15. Inferring human neutral genetic variation from craniodental phenotypes.

16. Descriptive catalog of Homo naledi dental remains from the 2013 to 2015 excavations of the Dinaledi Chamber, site U.W. 101, within the Rising Star cave system, South Africa.

17. Imputed genomes and haplotype-based analyses of the Picts of early medieval Scotland reveal fine-scale relatedness between Iron Age, early medieval and the modern people of the UK.

19. Hyperdontia across sub-Saharan Africa: Prevalence, patterning, and implications.

20. Lung-Targeted Delivery of Dimethyl Fumarate Promotes the Reversal of Age-Dependent Established Lung Fibrosis.

21. Dental caries in wild primates: Interproximal cavities on anterior teeth.

22. Leveraging ageing models of pulmonary fibrosis: the efficacy of nintedanib in ageing.

23. Relative tooth size, Bayesian inference, and Homo naledi.

25. Rocker jaw: Global context for a Polynesian characteristic.

26. The transition from hunting-gathering to agriculture in Nubia: dental evidence for and against selection, population continuity and discontinuity.

27. Ancient anomalies: Twinned and supernumerary incisors in a medieval Nubian.

28. Chipping and wear patterns in extant primate and fossil hominin molars: 'Functional' cusps are associated with extensive wear but low levels of fracture.

29. Do dental nonmetric traits actually work as proxies for neutral genomic data? Some answers from continental- and global-level analyses.

30. Impaired Myofibroblast Dedifferentiation Contributes to Nonresolving Fibrosis in Aging.

31. Tooth transposition prevalence and type among sub-Saharan Africans.

33. Root caries on a Paranthropus robustus third molar from Drimolen.

34. A probable genetic origin for pitting enamel hypoplasia on the molars of Paranthropus robustus.

35. The functional significance of dental and mandibular reduction in Homo: A catarrhine perspective.

36. Ancient teeth, phenetic affinities, and African hominins: Another look at where Homo naledi fits in.

37. Neuromandibular integration in humans and chimpanzees: Implications for dental and mandibular reduction in Homo.

38. Root grooves on two adjacent anterior teeth of Australopithecus africanus.

39. Amelogenesis imperfecta in the dentition of a wild chimpanzee.

40. Terminal Pleistocene Alaskan genome reveals first founding population of Native Americans.

41. Behavioral inferences from the high levels of dental chipping in Homo naledi.

42. Fluctuating asymmetry in dental and mandibular nonmetric traits as evidence for childcare sex bias in 19th/20th century Portugal.

43. The apportionment of tooth size and its implications in Australopithecus sediba versus other Plio-pleistocene and recent African hominins.

44. Who were they really? model-free and model-bound dental nonmetric analyses to affirm documented population affiliations of seven South African "Bantu" samples.

45. Two contemporaneous mitogenomes from terminal Pleistocene burials in eastern Beringia.

46. Homo naledi, a new species of the genus Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa.

47. Do nuclear DNA and dental nonmetric data produce similar reconstructions of regional population history? An example from modern coastal Kenya.

48. New insights into Eastern Beringian mortuary behavior: a terminal Pleistocene double infant burial at Upward Sun River.

49. Long-term seafloor monitoring at an open ocean aquaculture site in the western Gulf of Maine, USA: development of an adaptive protocol.

50. Questions of Khoesan continuity: dental affinities among the indigenous Holocene peoples of South Africa.

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