3.9 Article

Wear pattern and functional morphology of dryolestoid molars (Mammalia, Cladotheria)

Journal

PALAEONTOLOGISCHE ZEITSCHRIFT
Volume 85, Issue 3, Pages 269-285

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s12542-010-0091-8

Keywords

Abrasion; Attrition; Dryolestoid molars; Striations; Tribosphenic molars; Wear facets

Categories

Funding

  1. ESRF [EC-440]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [MA 1643/14]

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Pretribosphenic dryolestoid molars are characterized by a reversed triangular alignment of the primary trigon (formed by the paracone, metacone and stylocone) and trigonid crucial for the embrasure shearing process. These molars are abraded along the protocristid and paracristid, and show a typical wear pattern with mesially and distally sloping dentine fields due to their thin enamel. The wear pattern of lipotyphlan and didelphid tribosphenic molars with considerably thicker enamel does not show this sloping. In dryolestoid molars two directions of striations occur. Steeper striations oriented linguo-buccally are present on facet 1 below the protocristid, and about 10A degrees less inclined striations of the same direction have been observed near the talonid base. This reflects the railing function of the hypoflexid for the paracone of the corresponding upper molar. Facet 3 in the hypoflexid gets steeper with progressive wear, whereas facets 1 and 2 on the mesial and distal sides of the trigonid are flattened during wear. In the masticatory process the hypoflexid has mainly a shearing function with a crushing component because of its lesser inclination than the functional shearing surfaces below the trigonid crests. Striations on the exposed dentine field along the paracristid and in the guiding groove of facet 3 indicate that these two surfaces were formed by attrition (tooth to tooth contact). The exposed dentine fields at the cusp apices and along the protocristid are gauged and therefore must be a result of abrasion (tooth to food contact).

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