Australopiths: It's a raw food life

The amount of enamel that a tooth has is called enamel thickness. If you use a microscope to look at the enamel, you will see that the layers of enamel are braided together. These braids of enamel help keep the tooth from breaking apart.
Normally, we do not have to worry much about whether we have thick layers of enamel. If we crack a tooth, we can go to a dentist to get it fixed. If food is too hard to eat, we can always cook it.
However, this wasn't the case for our early ancestors. They did not have dentists and, if we go back far enough in human evolution, our early ancestors did not even know how to cook. Mostly, they had to rely on their thick enamel to crack and crunch through hard food. This was especially true for a group of our ancestors called the australopiths.
What big teeth you have!
The australopiths are a group of early hominins that lived 4.2 to 1.2 million years ago. During that approximately three-million-year time span, several species of australopiths evolved and went extinct throughout huge sections of the African continent. All australopiths had big back teeth made up of thick layers of enamel. A single back tooth could be as wide as a human adult’s thumbnail. A side effect of having such large back teeth is that the front teeth were very small and, in some cases, they looked like baby teeth.

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