Shown is an enlarged 3-D print of the jaw and tooth-like denticles of the ancient fish fossil. |
Writing in the journal Biology Letters, a team of scientists from Australian National University (ANU) and Queensland Museum describe their work using micro-CT scanning and 3-D printing to create three-dimensional prints of the jaws of Buchanosteus, an armored fish in an extinct class called placoderms.
Study co-author Yuzhi Hu, an ANU researcher, called the evolutionary origins of teeth a major and still open question. "We are researching this question using new evidence from an exceptionally preserved fossil fish," she said in a statement.
Buchanosteus is a common focus of research into the origins of teeth, the researchers say. |
"We are conducting further research on the internal tissue structure of tooth-like denticles in the mouth of the fish fossil, to determine whether they represent a transitional stage in the evolution of teeth," explained Gavin Young, ANU researcher and co-author of the study.
The team said its findings could help answer the questions of when and how teeth first appeared in evolutionary history.
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