Abstract
The dental microwear analysis (DMA) focuses on diet reconstructions, being able to provide proxy indicators of some events regarding technological shifts in food processing and social hierarchy and differences between individuals. Although DMA approaches diet characterization in ancient times, medieval samples have received limited attention, especially in Eastern Europe. The aim of this article is to explore, identify, and describe within-group patterns of dental microwear variation depending on sex and anatomic position (i.e., left/right, superior/inferior). The bioarchaeological material belongs to the Princely Court Necropolis of the seventeenth century discovered in Iasi (Romania)—the former capital city of Medieval Moldavia. We analyzed the micromorphological features on the occlusal surface of the second molar tooth through scanning electronic microscopy and imaging. Quantification of the microwear features (i.e., fine and coarse scratches, small and large pits) along with their bidimensional measurements (i.e., length and width) has been subjected to multivariate analysis. Our results show heterogeneous distribution of the microwear features within the analyzed second molars. Although the general microwear profile is dominated by fine and coarse scratches, large pits are also present. We can generally characterize the food as abrasive and relatively hard. In females, there are two microwear profiles highlighted based on the molar laterality, which suggests the use of the right side of the oral cavity to process harder foods. In males, the microwear profile is homogeneous and does not differ by laterality; it shows a great affinity with the pattern of the female right molars.
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Introduction
Dietary reconstruction is a fundamental niche in paleoanthropology, inasmuch as food can be a biomarker in human evolution, migrations, cultural behavior, and social organization, providing information regarding human paleobiology and paleoenvironment (Salazar-García et al. 2017; Ungar and Sponheimer 2011). Diet has been studied through stable isotopes, starch grain microfossils, phytoliths and pollen, and microbial DNA from dental calculus (Buckley et al. 2014; Cummings et al. 2018; Henry and Piperno 2008; Weyrich et al. 2017) and by microscopic methods for assessing dental macrowear (Górka et al. 2016; Petraru et al. 2018) and microwear (García-González et al. 2015; Mahoney 2006b; Schmidt 2010; Sołtysiak 2011).
Dental wear is the result of processes like abrasion (produced by the interaction between the teeth and other materials), attrition (produced by tooth-tooth contacts), and erosion (chemical wear produced by acidic agents) (Addy and Shellis 2006; Levrini et al. 2014). Another dental wear process is abfraction, which is associated with mastication, swallowing, and malocclusion forces; it manifests through microfractures and microstructural loss (Michael et al. 2009). Dental wear can be observed at both macroscopic (macrowear) and microscopic (microwear) scales.
The dental microwear analysis (DMA) has been used to characterize the diet of humans from the Paleolithic (Fiorenza et al. 2018; García-González et al. 2015; Mahoney 2006b), Neolithic, Bronze, Iron (Mahoney 2006a; Polo-Cerdá et al. 2007) to Middle Ages (Organ et al. 2005; Salazar-García et al. 2016; Smith et al. 2019). Studies concerning DMA can provide important indicators of past events regarding technological shifts in food processing, variation in diet, social hierarchy, and differences between individuals (García-González et al. 2019; Sołtysiak 2011). Dental microwear is visible under high power magnification and is caused by abrasive particles as they move upon the dental surface during chewing (Schmidt 2010). Known as the “Last Supper effect” (Grine 1986), dental microwear is due to a short-term process, reflecting the mechanical properties of the food and abrasives consumed in the weeks or even months before death (Scott and Halcrow 2017).
There are two main types of microwear features: linear features known as scratches and nonlinear features termed depressions or pits (Schmidt 2010; Smith et al. 2019). A pit is defined as having a length-to-width ratio of less than four-to-one, while a scratch has a length-to-width ratio that exceeds four-to-one (Schmidt 2010). Usually, soft food can create both fine scratches and small pits, but with a different frequency; leaves, meat, and gruels often cause parallel scratches on the dental surface (Organ et al. 2005; Ungar 2019). A more or less abrasive diet can be reflected by the ratio between linear and nonlinear marks and by their number and size (i.e., length and breadth) (Sołtysiak 2011). Microwear profiles dominated by few fine scratches are associated with relatively soft food. An abrasive diet leaves greater and more pronounced marks such as wide scratches. Harder food items produce more pits due to both the hard nature of items and the effect of chewing forces during mastication. Pitting may be caused by items such as bone fragments, nut shells, hard parts of fruits and seeds, some invertebrate exoskeletons, and phytoliths (Mahoney 2006b; Smith et al. 2019; Xia et al. 2015). It is hard to identify which foods caused one particularly microwear pattern. However, it is known that some hard items are crushed causing pitting and others are sheared and produce scratches on the enamel surface (Ungar 2019). For instance, phytoliths can produce both pits and scratches.
Although the dental microwear analysis (DMA) focuses on diet reconstruction of early hominins, dietary transitions, and diachronic and synchronic evaluation of the paleo diet, it can also approach the food variation within groups. Medieval communities can also be approached from the perspective of dental wear, in order to evaluate the physical properties (abrasiveness, hardness) of the food ingested. Though most articles address DMA for dietary characterization, the knowledge of within-group food variation is still precarious (Pérez-Pérez et al. 1994; Smith et al. 2019). Likewise, in northeastern Romania, paleo diet and DMA studies are lacking, even though this region has a rich archeological heritage due to its strategic position in old Europe. The former capital city of Medieval Moldavia, Iasi City (Fig. 1), was marked by episodes of cultural and economic development interrupted by dramatic events such as numerous Tatar, Turkish, or Polish invasions (Cloșcă 2008).
In 2008, a necropolis of the seventeenth century was discovered in the eastern part of the former Princely Court in Iasi City (47°09′23″N, 27°35′14.8″E, source: Google Earth). Today, remains of the former Princely Court (e.g. ruins, bastions, and cellars) are incorporated within the building named Palace of Culture (Badarau and Caproșu 2007). In this necropolis, 60 individual and collective tombs were discovered, from which 111 skeletons were recovered (Groza 2015). Some aspects of the archeological research are still unpublished, although the human skeletons have been extensively studied (Groza 2013, 2015; Groza et al. 2011). The anthropological studies highlighted some particularities of the necropolis: the absence of children; a disproportionate sex ratio (80 males/31 females); the males aged 35–60 years have a high frequency (> 50%); they are described by massiveness, robustness and typological polymorphism (Groza 2013; Popovici et al. 2019). A recent study, regarding the dental macrowear on the M2 molars showed differences by sex, probably mainly associated with greater consumption of abrasive and erosive food by males than by females (Petraru et al. 2018).
To confirm this assumption, we analyzed the micromorphological features on the M2 molar occlusal surfaces (microwear analysis) through scanning electronic microscopy and imaging. The aim of this article is to identify the within-group patterns of dental microwear variation, depending on sex and tooth anatomic position (i.e., left/right, upper/lower). Based on previous research, we assume that men have a different dental microwear profile than women, which may have social significance in terms of food access.
There are some limitations to this study that concern with methodological aspects. We applied the SEM methodology to observe and analyze the enamel marks in two-dimensional images, but in order to reduce the errors of measurements, we used three consecutive nonoverlapping micrographs/molar in a semiautomated software. The SEM analysis was destructive for archeological samples, but it was limited only on a single type of tooth (M2); the other teeth have remained intact and can be used for further analysis. The dental microwear evaluation is restricted at the occlusal surface, only on a specific area (facet 9), according to the methodology indicated by some researchers and due to the availability of the anthropological material. In the current stage of our research, we focused only on the study of dental wear. We will be able to correlate these results with the data of new analyses (e.g. stable isotopes, microbiome DNA profiling), which will be possible in collaboration with other specialized laboratories.
Material and methods
Material
This study is based on the analysis of left and right, maxillary (superior) and mandibular (inferior) second molars (M2), which belong to the skeletons discovered in the seventeenth-century necropolis from Iasi (Romania). The M2 molars (n = 56) were selected, while the first and third molars were avoided because M1 has a variable morphology and a high degree of wear and M3 is not always present—congenitally missing. The selected samples belong to skeletons with differing ages at death and sex previously estimated by Groza et al. (2011) (Table 1).
Methods
Imaging
The dental microwear analysis (DMA) was performed on facet 9 (Fig. 2) of the distobuccal cusp (mandibular molars) and mesiolingual cusp (maxillary molars) (Fiorenza et al. 2011; García-González et al. 2015; Mahoney 2006b), using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) Tescan Vega II SBH. Contaminants were removed from the dental surface using ethanol and cotton wool (Mahoney 2006a). Each sample was mounted on an aluminum stub and placed into a Sputter Coating Unit EMS 550X to receive a 30 nm layer of gold. The occlusal surface which corresponds to the facet 9 area was imaged through three consecutive nonoverlapping micrographs/molar, toward the bottom, middle, and tip of the facet.
Microwear analysis
Micrographs were analyzed through an early version of MicroWear software (Strani et al. 2018). On each micrograph, on an area of 0.3025 mm2, microwear features were identified and automatically classified on the length/width ratio (4:1) (Strani et al. 2018; Ungar 1995), as linear marks (fine scratches and coarse scratches) and nonlinear marks (small pits and large pits). Variables such as the number of pits, small pits, large pits, scratches, fine scratches, and coarse scratches, along with data concerning the mean and standard deviation of lengths and widths of identified features, were automatically obtained. The presence of scratches that cross each other and a number of parallel scratches were also reported (Strani et al. 2019).
Statistical analysis
For this study, the following variables were used: width and length of small pits (sp-w, sp-l), width and length of large pits (lp-w, lp-l), width and length of fine scratches (fs-w, fs-l), and the width and length of coarse scratches (cs-w, cs-l). Even if the scratch length variables (fs-l and cs-l) are the most disputable due to the possibility of being truncated by the edge of the micrograph, we consider these variables in order to obtain as much information as possible (Schmidt 2010).
The Shapiro-Wilk test for assessing normality of variables and Q-Q plots were initially used (Razali and Wah 2011). Metric variables were evaluated separately for each sex and anatomic position (right and left sides). A t test was performed to determine if there were any differences between maxillary and mandibular molar microwear patterns. The Mann-Whitney U test is a nonparametric version of the t test and was used to examine statistical differences between variables with a non-normal distribution. The paired sample t test was used to determine if there were differences between left and right molar microwear patterns. This test assumes that the differences calculated for each pair have an approximately normal distribution. The Wilcoxon test is the nonparametric version of the paired sample t test and was used to examine the distribution of variables whose data are not normally distributed.
The principal component analysis (PCA) was used as an exploratory tool for data reduction and correlation of the variables underlying microwear patterns and relationships between molars. The variation patterns for both sexes were analyzed with multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) and canonical variate analysis (CVA). Also, discriminant analyses (DA) were performed to examine the patterns of molar variations. Plots and all statistical tests were conducted using XLSTAT Premium version 2019.2.1, PAST (Hammer et al. 2001) and R software (R Core Team 2013).
Results and discussion
All four types of microwear are unequally distributed in the analyzed M2 molars. In the female series (except for the G4M14 skeleton), our results show the distribution of fine scratches more on the M2l and m2l and then on the M2r and m2r. The numeric distribution of microwear features for each individual is shown in Fig. 3.
The microwear data obtained by micrograph analysis have been subjected to DA. The four quantitative variables (N.fs, N.cs, N.lp, N.sp) and two qualitative variables (sex and molar position in skull) were used. The molars are represented on the first two factor axes through centroid groups (Fig. 4). The teeth were reclassified into two main patterns. The results provided a discrimination with 53.7% of extant patterns (mean value), with the highest discrimination for the molars of left and right sides (64.29% correct classification). The first factor F1 is characterized by 73.89% of the variance and is correlated with the N.fs variable. This discrimination between two patterns is due to the number of fine scratches: more on the surface on m2l and less on m2r. These patterns are present especially in females. To a lesser extent, F2 is correlated with N.cs and N.sp (16.87%).
The right mandibular microwear profile is characterized by a lower number of fine scratches than the left mandibular profile. Also, the mean of scratches is higher on m2l (mean = 196.4) than on m2r (mean = 117.2). The coefficient of variation value (CV%) varies from 41.57 for the m2r pattern, to 22.67 for the m2l pattern. The microwear pattern that characterizes the right mandibular molars differs from the left one in the number of large pits (mean value of N.lp = 24.15 for the m2r pattern and 41.46 for m2l). Regarding the other two variables (N.sp and N.cs), similar values were observed for the two microwear patterns (mean N.sp = 4.61 for m2r and 6.46 for m2l, while mean N. cs = 72.07 for m2r and 71.15 for m2l).
The orientation of the scratches also suggests a difference in the microwear pattern between the right and left molars (Fig. 5). The number of pairs of parallel scratches is higher in females on the M2l and m2l molars than on M2r and m2r (*p < 0.05). No statistical significance is apparent in the male dataset for the number of crossed and parallel scratches.
The microwear types were quantified for 56 M with three micrographs for each tooth, summing to an analyzed surface area of 0.9075 mm2/M. When assigned by sex criteria, there were no differences between the percentage of fine scratches and large and small pits. The average percentages of the microwear features are presented in Fig. 6. A significant statistical difference was observed in the frequency of coarse scratches between the female and male datasets (p = 0.49). When sex was pooled, the total microwear profile was dominated by fine scratches (57.88%), followed by coarse scratches (25.60%). Lower values were registered for nonlinear marks: 1.93% for small pits and 14.57% for large pits.
Based on the number of recorded microwear features, an attempt to define a characteristic diet is difficult. It is well known that all diets can produce some form of marks including pitting (Mahoney 2006b). Our results show that the general microwear profile is dominated by linear marks. Even if the abundance of fine scratches is higher, the number of wider scratches and large pits is also remarkable due to their similar values. According to Sołtysiak (2011), a high proportion of lines and pits are characteristics of an abrasive diet. Moreover, the microwear analysis showed the presence of wider scratches, which may be another indicator of an abrasive diet. Scratches and pits are a normal result of the mastication process. To distinguish a more abrasive diet from a less abrasive one, the “width” of the variables must be taken into consideration (Schmidt 2010; Sołtysiak 2011).
For a more specific analysis, the data have been divided by sex criteria and have included for each microwear type two-dimensional measurements: length and width. In the following analysis, eight variables were included: sp-l (small pits-length), sp-w (small pits-width), lp-l (large pits-length), lp-w (large pits-width), fs-l (fine scratches-length), fs-w (fine scratches-width), cs-l (coarse scratches-length), and cs-w (coarse scratches-width).
Male data analysis
The data provided from males have shown a non-normal distribution for all variables (Table 2). According to Shapiro-Wilk test and Q-Q plots, all metric data of the pits and the length of the coarse scratches are non-normally distributed; therefore, nonparametric tests have been applied (Mann-Whitney U). For the other variables with normal distribution (fs-l, fs-w, cs-w), parametric tests have been used (t test).
According to Mann-Whitney U test and a t test, no statistically significant differences between the maxillary and mandibular variables were found. The paired sample t test and Wilcoxon test show no statistical differences between the right and left molars, except for the fs-w variable. The fs-w of the left maxillary molar is larger than that of the right (t test = − 3.495; p = 0.01). The descriptive analysis is presented for the entire material in Table 3.
Measurements of the eight variables were included in the PCA analysis. Seven principal components were calculated to account for the total variability in the dataset. The first two represents 54.85% of the total variability in the sample. The distribution of molars on the first two principal components and the vectors of the variable loading are shown in Fig. 7. Along the first PC, lp-l and cs-l have the greatest contribution to the variability of microwear patterns, and lp-w and s-w less so. As expected, given the results of previous tests, the variables embedded in the evaluation of variance models do not reveal particularities in the sample.
Female data analysis
According to a Shapiro-Wilk test and Q-Q plots, all variables have a normal distribution in the female sample. To compare the data of the maxillary and mandibular second molars, the variables were subjected to the parametric sample t test. No significant differences between measurements were observed. The paired t test reveals differences in microwear patterns of left and right sides based on sp-w, lp-w, fs-w, and cs-w (Table 4). Summary statistics for the variables of both sides are shown in Table 4.
In PCA, the first two principal components account for 55.56% of the total variability in females. The distribution of molars on the first two principal components and the vectors of the variable loading are shown in Fig. 8. Along the PC, the lp-l and lp-w variables make the greatest contribution, which suggest that the correlation between the length and width has a defining role in the distribution of molars. Apparently, these variables have an important role in the distinction of these two microwear profile models, on the left (M2l, m2l) and right (M2r, m2r) sides. The fs-l and cs-l variables have a minimum influence in determining the two patterns.
The presence of the two microwear profiles in females can indicate the existence of a preferred chewing side (PCS) (Pond et al. 1986). Laterality is a relatively common occurrence to variable degrees. In our study, we reduced the factors that might induce laterality as much as possible. Thus, in order to exclude the laterality behavior in people with dental pathologies, we used as a selection criterium for the analyzed teeth the absence of odontopathologies, dental granuloma, or antemortem tooth loss, near and at the studied molars. Research conducted by Mizumori et al. (2003) showed that harder food evoked more laterality. The distribution of food with a hard texture is commonly oriented toward the right side (Zamanlu et al. 2012). Also, we have to mention that our microscopical screening and imaging does not reveal atypical wear types on the occlusal surfaces to suggest the use of teeth as tools.
Comparative analysis
Given the existence of variation in the female sample, our question is whether there are affinities between female and male patterns. To this end, the eight microwear variables were evaluated through MANOVA and CVA. The results of the multivariate analysis showed a significant difference between microwear patterns (Wilk’s Lambda test: Value = 0.536, F = 2.09, p < 0.01).
The CVA loadings resulting from the MANOVA reveal the contribution of variables to the models of microwear patterns in male and female datasets. The variables with loadings higher than 0.3 were considered defining features to clarify affinities between variation patterns (Table 5). A greater affinity in the microwear profiles is highlighted between the male pattern and the right side of female molars (Fig. 9). The fs-w variable has the highest values in male series, being closer to the values from the right side molars of females (one-way ANOVA: F = 8.15; p = 0.00081; MANOVA: Hotelling’s p value 0.05).
We hypothesized that men would be characterized by a different microwear profile than women, and the results of our study only partially confirm the initial assumption. The dental microanalysis emphasized a hard and abrasive diet in both males and females, although different microwear profiles were distinguished.
Dietary abrasiveness may be influenced by the number of abrasive particles ingested with food, especially in agriculture products (Romero et al. 2013). Gügel et al. (2001) discovered that different types of cereals can cause varied pit sizes causing a difference in microwear pitting. Also, grit adhering to food can cause microscratches (0.1–1 μm width) comparable to those produced by phytoliths; bones and hard legumes produce a localized microfracture distinguishable from the taphonomic damage (Peters 1982; Ungar et al. 1995). Farmers had a more abrasive diet due to the exogenous grit from the agricultural products in their diets, especially from those with poorly processed foodstuffs (Salazar-García et al. 2016). Grit from unwell processed cereals can be linked to a more abrasive microwear profile (Romero et al. 2013).
Archeological and documentary evidences indicate that the Medieval population in Iasi City used rye, barley, buckwheat, and millet in their diet, cereals that were ground to make flour (Bilavschi 2013). During the major famine in the second half of the seventeenth century, cereals were substituted with dried bulrush which was ground to obtain an alternative kind of flour. The technique of baking bread directly on the clay oven floor increased the content of abrasive particles in the food (Székely 2018).
In males, the microwear profile does not differ by molar laterality, being more homogeneous and characterized predominantly by coarse scratches and pits. Although the archeological research is not finished, we could make the assumption that the male skeletons analyzed may have belonged to guard soldiers in the former “Princely Court,” fed with harder and less varied foods.
Our results show two microwear profiles based on molar laterality (M2l, m2l and M2r, m2r) in females and one less heterogeneous microwear profile in males. It is well known that, although the human skeleton has a bilateral symmetric development, asymmetry is commonly found in populations (Thiesen et al. 2016). Thus, bilateral disharmonies can be identified in the craniofacial structures, uncorrelated with syndromes, traumas, or pathologies (Primozic et al. 2012). In our study, the microwear pattern associated with the right-sided molars in the female dataset suggests a preferred chewing side used to triturate apart harder foods. Apparently, therefore, a lateralized chewing behavior can affect the dental microwear pattern. In these particular cases, the bias effect can be induced unintentionally and considerably influence the results obtained.
Under these circumstances, we suggest considering the dental wear on both sides (left and right), when the anthropological material exists. Further studies on microwear asymmetry in ancient human populations are required in order to evaluate the frequency and connection between different microwear patterns and a lateralized chewing behavior.
Conclusions
The occlusal microwear analysis showed a heterogeneous distribution of microwear types on the second molars in each skeleton. The general microwear profile is dominated by linear marks, followed by large pits. We may use the term “abrasive” to characterize the diet of the human population analyzed, due to the high proportion of pronounced traces such as coarse scratches and large pits.
In females, we distinguish two microwear profiles based on the molar laterality. This suggests the use of the right side of the oral cavity to triturate apart harder foods. The microwear profile in males does not differ by laterality, being more homogeneous. It shows close similarity with the pattern of the right second molars in females.
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This project is funded by the Romanian Ministry of Research and Innovation within Program 1 - Development of the national RD system, Subprogram 1.2 - Institutional Performance - RDI excellence funding projects, Contract no.34PFE/19.10.2018.
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Petraru, OM., Groza, VM., Lobiuc, A. et al. Dental microwear as a diet indicator in the seventeenth-century human population from Iasi City, Romania. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 12, 184 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-020-01159-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-020-01159-2