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"It is impossible to tell today, but the deer teeth are certainly very important information," says Nowell.
Thus the use of red deer teeth as personal ornaments was widespread across Europe during the Mesolithic, covering much of the same territory as the U5b genetic groups found so far.
Mesolithic peoples used widely varying techniques to produce the perforations in the canines, Rigaud says, suggesting that although they started with the same raw materials, deer teeth, they had different cultural traditions when it came to the way they actually crafted the ornaments.
Of the 35 red deer teeth and bones counted, only 12 are derived from older animals, making the percentage juvenile red deer represented approximately 66% (Figures S7, S8).
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Furthermore, the terrestrial animal with the lowest δ13C value, a red deer tooth collagen sample with δ13C = -23.6‰, would have a flesh value of about -29.1‰, assuming a flesh bone collagen fractionation of 5.5‰.
She also showed me a ring from Germany inlaid with deer's teeth, a style still used today in Southern Germany.
As in the old days, she had to use deer clackers, teeth, quills, and the bones of small birds.
Due to the abundance in nature (as phosphate ores) and presence in living organisms (as bones, teeth, deer antlers and the majority of various pathological calcifications), calcium phosphates are the inorganic compounds of a special interest for human being.
The things on the right are the deer's back teeth.
You can chew through stuff and skin things off with your fingernails but you can't, for example, dress a deer with your teeth and your fingernails.
They included antler pieces and the digits known as dewclaws from deer; bear claws and teeth; and elk ivory.
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