News
College of LAS News
Student Sections
Special Series
Marketing and Media
Faculty Honors and RSS Feed
Anthropology
Slim Pickings
Picking one's teeth may be humanity's oldest habit.
Your parents did it. Even your great-great grandparents did it. The urge to dig at your teeth to dislodge a wedged slivver of food is, researchers say, older than written history. LAS anthropologist Dr Leslea Hlusko claims that ancient man used rudimentary toothpicks, made from grass stalks 1.8 million years ago. Hlusko argues that toothpicking is probably the most persistent habit documented in human evolution.
Hlusko bases her conclusion on her studies of fossil dental records of baboons that go back 10 million years or so. As a biological anthropologist, she combines modern genetic studies of the teeth of baboons with ancient fossils to understand the primate's evolution. To conduct her research, she travels regularly to the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research in San Antonio, TX, and to a remote region of Ethiopia where she examines fossils of Old World monkeys 0.5 to 6 million years old.
July 2004
More LAS News Articles
- Speeches, Pennies, and Memories Mark the Lincoln Hall Renovation Kick-Off
- Amphetamine Use in Adolescence May Impair Adult Working Memory
- Rio Games Symbolize a Perennial Dilemma in Latin America
- Researchers Work to Understand the Confounding Sex Life of Papaya
- Scholars, East Europeans Reveal the Mixed Emotions Surrounding the Fall of the Berlin Wall
- A Well-Meant Compliment Could Be Dangerous to Your Child’s Future
- Bringing Math Class into the 21st Century
