Terms useful in Dental Anthropology
Apical—the surfaces of a tooth that face towards the apex of the roots
Buccal—the surface of canines, premolars and molars facing the cheeks
Cervix—the meeting point of the crown and root (the CEJ-cement-enamel junction)
Cingulum—broad bulge girdling the cervical one-third of the crown
Contact area—area of contact between two teeth where the mesial and distal surfaces of adjacent teeth abut
Crest—large ridges descending from the apices of cusps or connecting two cusps
Crown—the part of the tooth that projects into the mouth; coated with enamel
Cusp—pyramidal or cone shaped elevation on the occlusal surface of a tooth with three to four ridges or crests descending from its apex
Cuspid—elevation smaller than a cusp
Cuspule—elevation smaller than a cuspule
Dentine—the tissue that forms the core of the whole tooth
Distal—the surface of all teeth that faces along the dental arcade away from the median sagittal plane
Enamel—the hard coating covering the crown of the tooth
Fissure—a fault resulting from the imperfect joining of two cusps or lobes
Fossa—round depression
Groove—linear, trough-like depression between cusps
Incisal—the cutting edge of incisors and canines (equivalent to occlusal in the teeth that overlap during normal occlusion
Labial—the surfaces of incisors facing the lips
Lingual—the surface of all teeth that faces the tongue
Lobe—large, rounded projections on occlusal surface
Mammelons—rounded prominence (on incisal margins when they first erupt)
Mesial—the surface of all teeth that faces along the dental arcade towards the median sagittal plane
Occlusal—the surface of all teeth that parallels the plane in which upper and lower dentitions meet. In particular, it is used to describe the surface of premolars and molars that meets in normal occlusion
Pit—small circular, tightly defined depression on crown
Pulp—the living tissue of the tooth
Ridge—similar to crests, but smaller and less sharply defined
Root—the part of the tooth embedded in the jaws; coated with cement
Tubercle—small, rounded prominence on surface of tooth
Wear facet—flat, polished surface created by habitual contact between teeth
Tags: Dental Terms, tooth
May 11th, 2008 at 12:56 pm
very useful terms compiled by parul,
thanks for sharing, keep up the good work.
regards
vinod rawat