Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • All these ancient skulls have perfectly straight teeth,

  • despite almost certainly never sporting braces.

  • And this isn't some strange sample.

  • According to the fossil record,

  • ancient humans usually had straight teeth,

  • complete with third molarsor wisdom teeth.

  • In fact, the dental dilemmas that fuel the demand for braces

  • and wisdom teeth extractions today appear to be recent developments.

  • So what happened?

  • While it's nearly impossible to know for sure,

  • scientists have a hypothesis.

  • A couple million years ago,

  • the ancestors of modern humans lived a subsistence lifestyle.

  • Their teeth and jaws had to work hard to make the food they ate digestible.

  • Indeed, the surfaces of many of their teeth show extensive wear and flattening.

  • They also had larger jaws and teeth overall.

  • At some point, they began using tools and fire to cook and prepare food,

  • which helped break it down.

  • A lot more time passed and, around 12,000 years ago,

  • some humans started farming and domesticating animals and plants.

  • Over the course of several thousand years,

  • it became more common for people to process and refine their food.

  • Milling technologies helped remove the tougher parts of grains,

  • like the germ and bran from rice and wheat.

  • Fast forward to the industrial Revolution,

  • and technological innovations dramatically accelerated these processes.

  • In a relatively short time,

  • many human mouths were relieved of a great deal

  • of their grinding, crushing, and pulverizing duties.

  • And interestingly, it was around this time

  • that tooth crookedness appears to have become more common.

  • Examining fossils spanning millions of years of evolution,

  • researchers have observed a gradual decrease in tooth and jaw size

  • in humans and our ancestors.

  • Many think that, for most of human history,

  • dietary shiftslike the introduction of meat and the advent of cooking

  • were gradual,

  • and that changes in tooth and jaw size basically kept pace with one another.

  • But with the more recent revolutions in agricultural and culinary habits,

  • that relationship changed.

  • As the theory goes, over a relatively short period,

  • some human populations saw a decrease in jawbone size,

  • while teeth stayed roughly the same size,

  • meaning they're left vying for limited space.

  • When they do grow in, they may displace others

  • and get jostled into some eccentric positions.

  • And then wisdom teeth, which are usually the last to make their debut,

  • seem to only complicate things further.

  • In many cases, they have little or no space to emerge.

  • This can lead to impacted wisdom teeth,

  • which may cause discomfort and infections if not surgically removed.

  • So larger jaws appear to be associated with greater chewing demands.

  • And many scientists think that as people's diets have become less chewy,

  • their jaws have gotten smallerand that this has led to dental crowding,

  • resulting in dental crookedness and impacted wisdom teeth.

  • This hypothesis has been supported by some preliminary experimental data.

  • In a 1983 study, researchers raised 43 squirrel monkeys

  • on diets of either naturally tough or artificially soft food.

  • Those fed softer food had more crowded premolars,

  • rotated or displaced teeth, and narrower dental arches.

  • And a 2004 study similarly observed that hyraxes raised on cooked foods

  • experienced roughly 10% less growth in facial areas involved in chewing

  • compared to those given raw and dried foods.

  • In other words, the issue at large seems to be environmental

  • or one of lifestyleinstead of a genetic one,

  • though heritable factors may be at play in some instances.

  • It's estimated that somewhere between 30 to 60% of people today

  • experience some level of tooth crowding.

  • But this trend varies across global populations.

  • Some people naturally never have wisdom teeth.

  • And some don't experience tooth crowding or crookedness

  • and still get their wisdom teeth without a hitch.

  • This seems to coincide with diets that are less processed.

  • So how can we prevent tooth crowding early,

  • using lifestyle changes and orthodontics?

  • Well, it's certainly something to chew over.

All these ancient skulls have perfectly straight teeth,

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B1 中級

Why do we have crooked teeth when our ancestors didn’t? - G. Richard Scott

  • 20 1
    shuting1215 に公開 2023 年 05 月 07 日
動画の中の単語