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Do humans have teeth the same as animals? Detailed answer

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Do humans have teeth the same as animals?

When a scientist, excavating fossils or other antiquities, gets some teeth, he is very happy. Teeth are an important key to recognizing what kind of living creature lived in a given place. For example, predatory animals had worn teeth, rodents had undercut teeth, cattle had crumbled teeth.

Each animal - be it a horse, a cow, a mouse or a dog - had teeth that corresponded to its lifestyle and diet. Beavers, for example, have very sharp teeth. The fangs of cats and dogs are strong and sharp, which allows them to easily grab and tear prey. Their powerful teeth tear into pieces and grind raw meat and bones. The teeth of a squirrel are able to easily crack open the hard shell of nuts. Fish also use their teeth to help them cope with their food.

Some sharks have sharp teeth for eating fish. Other sharks have blunt teeth, with which they crush the shells of oysters, crabs and other similar animals. The teeth of the snake are angled inwards to prevent their prey from slipping out.

Humans are known to have a "collective" arrangement of teeth, that is, they have different types of teeth located next to each other. According to scientists, the structure of human teeth indicates that the human body is adapted for plant and animal food.

Author: Likum A.

 Random interesting fact from the Great Encyclopedia:

Why in the 19th century did the British documentally assign the status of a ship to the island?

In 1815, the British occupied the uninhabited Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean and built a military garrison there. However, there was no money in the state treasury to support him. Then the island was renamed "Her Majesty's Ship Ascension", standing on the roadstead, and the inhabitants of the garrison were transferred to sailors. Since England never skimped on the maintenance of the fleet, money was allocated.

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