Learn how researchers recreated a 59,000-year-old Neanderthal dental procedure and uncovered evidence that ancient humans may ...
23hon MSN
59,000-year-old tooth offers a rare glimpse into how Neanderthals handled a medical problem
Neanderthals used sophisticated techniques with a stone drill to treat a painful dental cavity, according to new research.
Migraine specialist says patients are being overlooked as researchers focus too heavily on brain imaging and biomarkers ...
India Today on MSN
Neanderthals were dentists, treated teeth: 59,000-year-old tooth reveals
The tooth was unearthed from Chagyrskaya Cave in Siberia and pushes back the record of primitive dentistry by more than ...
59,000 years ago in what’s now southwestern Siberia, a Neanderthal had a toothache. It must have been a doozy because they ...
A 59,000-year-old Neanderthal tooth discovered in a cave in Siberia shows clear signs of dental surgery with a small stone ...
A hole drilled into a 60,000-year-old molar suggests that Neanderthals practiced complex dental care long before modern ...
A new study suggests that about 59,000 years ago, someone used a small stone tool to drill into a badly decayed tooth, remove ...
Cavemen conducted dental surgery tens of thousands of years before anesthetics, reveals new research. Neanderthal dentists ...
The widespread use of antibiotics for children has resulted in Temporomandibular Joint (TMJ) disorders becoming a growing but ...
In fact, a survey commissioned by the American Association of Endodontists found 61% of Americans would prefer a treatment that saves their natural tooth and about 78% would do almost anything to ...
GMA Network on MSN
Tooth from Siberian cave reveals Neanderthal dental surgery
About 59,000 years ago, a Neanderthal suffered from an awful toothache caused by a deep cavity in one of the molars on the lower jaw. That tooth has now been discovered inside a Siberian cave, bearing ...
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