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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Pak dental school alumni 9,000 years ago
2006-04-18
Evidence has been found of the world's oldest dentists, who drilled teeth to remove decay about 9,000 years ago. Treatment was carried out in an area of what is now Pakistan, using tiny, flint-tipped wooden drills, that rotated at about 20 times a second, say scientists who reconstructed the implements.
Flint tip, wooden drill, 20 times a second. Think about that one as you go into the dentist for your checkup.
Italian researchers who examined 300 skeletons exhumed from an ancient burial site discovered nine had drilled teeth. Some of the holes were in teeth at the back of the jaws, indicating that they had not been made for decorative purposes. Wear and tear on the surfaces near the holes confirmed that drilling had been performed on patients who then continued to chew on the teeth.
Wonder if they got approval from the local institutional review board?
"The treatment would have been excruciatingly painful because the vibrations would have been very low and very strong," said Professor Alfredo Coppola of Rome University's human biology department.
Which is why they found several skeletons with severed heads -- those were the dentists.
However, it was possible that pain relief had been offered, said Prof Coppola, whose team worked on the project with researchers from France, Mexico and the United States. "This area is well-known for its opium production, so perhaps drugs were used," he said. Drill bits used for making bone, shell and stone beads were also found at the site at Mehrgarh in Balochistan. Scientists believe that local expertise in making jewellery was used for the early dentistry. The holes made by the drills were deep enough - at up to one-third of a centimetre - to expose sensitive nerves.
Wonder if they stopped there, too.
Although no filling materials have been found, the researchers believe that the holes were probably packed with bitumen, resin or cotton, which has since disintegrated. "These findings are extraordinary because they provide evidence for the tradition of a type of proto-dentistry in early farming culture," said Prof Coppola.
As part of proto-life.
He described the drill, which his team reconstructed, as an "ingenious invention" which worked by pulling a string that spun the end and made the flint tip revolve. Although 20 times a second would have been considered a fast speed 9,000 years ago, modern dental drills rotate at 20,000 times a second.
And doncha just hate the sound it makes?
Posted by:Steve White

#5  ShepUK,

I'm guessing that your dentist is Lemming of the BDA, right? (G)
Posted by: Ernest Brown   2006-04-18 16:30  

#4  Frank did you know you can etch glass with fluoride? And they put it in the drinking water. Humans are weird. Bet you didn't know that Pacific Gas & Electric which ran the street cars in much of your state was bought out by certain large industrial firms which destroyed the street cars and introduced Flu0ride to your water supply in an effort to build the Inter-State Highway system for the Martian Armoured Forces. Trust me, you can ask AP
Posted by: 6   2006-04-18 16:23  

#3  9000 yrs ago - probably also when the fluoride in the drining water "controversy" started
Posted by: Frank G   2006-04-18 13:49  

#2  Is it safe?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-04-18 13:14  

#1  i like going to dentist - is that odd/rare? specially loved it when i've had teeth pulled out in past with that mentel cool crunching as they wrench it out, also like having having fillings done and that sort of thing too. Odd eh. Not sure i'd be up for this flint drill thingy but i guess my dentist isnt gonna pull one out and use one on me so need not worry. Last time i was in the dentist i was very shocked (and amused) when a man at the reception was asked when he had last gone to the dentist, he replied proudly in an almost triumphrant manner that he had never in all his 64 years been to see the dentist! it was great cos he actually thought that was a good thing to be proud of Rofl.
Posted by: ShepUK   2006-04-18 13:07  

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