Kristin L. Krueger
Loyola University Chicago
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Featured researches published by Kristin L. Krueger.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2013
Leslea J. Hlusko; Joshua P. Carlson; Debbie Guatelli-Steinberg; Kristin L. Krueger; Ben Mersey; Peter S. Ungar; Alban Defleur
Here we describe dental remains from a Neanderthal fossil assemblage from Moula-Guercy, France. Our report demonstrates that the Moula-Guercy hominid remains contribute important morphological, developmental, and behavioral data to understanding Neanderthal evolutionary history. We include gross comparative morphological descriptions and enamel surface microstructure and microwear data. These teeth reveal numerous characteristics that are diagnostic of Neanderthals and provide no evidence for the presence of any other hominid taxa. Enamel growth increment data from the Moula-Guercy specimens yield evidence of a Neanderthal pattern of development, although at the lower end of the range of variation. The presence of a significant number of linear enamel hypoplasias indicates that these individuals were stressed during childhood. Molar microwear data suggest that these Neanderthals did not differ significantly from modern humans in terms of the fracture properties of the food they were consuming. The incisor microwear and macro striations provide evidence that these individuals may have been using their anterior teeth as tools, similar to the practices of several modern human populations such as the Inuit, Ipiutak, and Australian Aboriginals, and reminiscent of evidence from other Neanderthals from Krapina, Croatia, as well as the 600,000 year old hominids from Sima de los Huesos, Spain. Am J Phys Anthropol 151:477-491, 2013.© 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Central European Journal of Geosciences | 2012
Kristin L. Krueger; Peter S. Ungar
Some Neandertal anterior teeth show unusual and excessive gross wear, commonly explained by non-dietary anterior tooth use, or using the anterior dentition as a tool, clamp, or third hand. This alternate use is inferred from aboriginal arctic populations, who used their front teeth in this manner. Here we examine anterior dental microwear textures of the Krapina Neandertals to test this hypothesis and further analyze tooth use in these hominins.Microwear textures from 17 Krapina Dental People were collected by white-light confocal profilometry using a 100x objective lens. Four adjacent scans were generated, totaling an area of 204x276 μm, and were analyzed using Toothfrax and SFrax SSFA software packages. The Neandertals were compared to six bioarchaeological/ethnographic samples with reported variation in diet, abrasive load, and non-dietary anterior tooth use.Results indicate that Krapina anterior teeth lack extreme microwear textures expected of hominins exposed to heavy abrasives or those that regularly generated high stresses associated with intense use of the front teeth as tools. Krapina hominins have microwear attributes in common with Coast Tsimshian, Aleut, and Puye Pueblo samples. Collectively, this suggests that the Krapina Neandertals faced moderate abrasive loads and only periodically used their anterior teeth as tools for non-diet related behaviors.
Journal of Human Evolution | 2012
Peter S. Ungar; Kristin L. Krueger; Robert J. Blumenschine; Jackson K. Njau; Robert S. Scott
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2008
Kristin L. Krueger; Jessica R. Scott; Richard F. Kay; Peter S. Ungar
Journal of Human Evolution | 2017
Kristin L. Krueger; Peter S. Ungar; Debbie Guatelli-Steinberg; Jean-Jacques Hublin; Alejandro Pérez-Pérez; Erik Trinkaus; John C. Willman
Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2015
Kristin L. Krueger
Archive | 2014
Kristin L. Krueger; Charles E. Hilton; Benjamin M. Auerbach; Libby W. Cowgill
The 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, New Orleans | 2017
John C. Willman; Kristin L. Krueger
Archive | 2015
Kristin L. Krueger
Archive | 2014
Sireen El Zaatari; Kristin L. Krueger; Jean-Jacques Hublin