16 September 2025 The Future is the Product of the Past

Dental Treatments That Surprised Neanderthals

Before the invention of modern dental instruments, people tried to treat teeth using primitive methods. Nobody wants to have a toothache. Ancient people had to make do with the tools they had, and these tools were often made of rocks.

Paleoanthropologist David Frayer of the University of Kansas and his dentist Joe Gatti collaborated on the study of teeth in Neanderthal fossils found in Krabina caves in Croatia. They found evidence that early humans had used primitive hand-made toothpicks to help treat dental problems, such as impacted molars, fractured cusps, and oral pain.

The 130,000-year-old teeth showed grooves, scrapes, and marks that were likely caused by a Neanderthal using sharpened bones or reeds to access the diseased tooth.

“The Neanderthal was presumably trying to treat itself … probing the space between the teeth to get at that twisted molar. Anybody who has ever had an impacted tooth knows what that’s like,” Frayer told the Washington Post.

 Neanderthals were using toothpicks 130.000 years ago.
Neanderthals were using toothpicks 130.000 years ago.

Early humans used stone tools to treat teeth

This practice continued for thousands of years. According to a study published in Iflscience, the researchers analyzed the infected molar tooth with a scanning electron microscope and found chips and lines that they suggested were evidence of “intentional” removal of infected tissue with a small, sharp instrument.

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, looked at a molar from a well-preserved 25-year-old male skeleton, the remains of which were first discovered in a rock shelter in Belluno, Italy, in 1988. The researchers found evidence that the molar had infected and partially treated with sharp flint tools.

“The treatment went unnoticed for all these years. The cavity was described as a simple carious lesion,” lead researcher Stefano Benazzi from the University of Bologna told Discovery News.

The ancient tooth represents “the oldest archaeological evidence of” dentistry, the study notes.

A 14,000-year-old tooth infected with this study provided us with the earliest known evidence of dentistry. Instead of sterile instruments and anesthesia, our ancestors used sharpened stone tools to remove their cavities. So, thank you next time you visit the dentist, you do not have to go through the harsh and basic dental practices of the Paleolithic period.

Related Articles

Interesting from Each Other 7 Amazing Historical Discoveries

21 April 2021

21 April 2021

Archaeologists signed interesting from each other and magnificent discoveries with their work in the last 20 years. Let’s take a...

The Most Unusual Places İn The World

10 February 2021

10 February 2021

There are countless beautiful places in the world. All of them are interesting and great than each other. We have...

300-Year-Old Sacred Mummified Mermaid From Japan’s Mystery Solved

20 February 2023

20 February 2023

A mummified mermaid has been worshiped in Japan for centuries because locals believe it has healing powers. However, upon closer...

Michelangelo, the artistic giant, was actually rather short

3 September 2021

3 September 2021

The legendary Michelangelo Buonarroti left huge works behind as an artist. But Italian researchers found that the shoes of this...

The Oldest Known Map of Europe, “Saint-Bélec Slab”

6 April 2021

6 April 2021

An ornate Bronze Age stone slab (Saint-Bélec slab) that was excavated in France in 1900 and forgotten about for over...

How Was the Life of Teenager in Ancient Times?

1 March 2021

1 March 2021

Youth is the same in every era. Not so hard to guess. How was your life as a teenager? You...

Iconic Double Arch collapsed after an ancient pyramid in America, Tribes Link Fall With ‘Bad Omen’

10 August 2024

10 August 2024

Two ancient North American structures collapsed within just nine days of one another. The iconic Double Arch, also known as...

Rai Stones and Bitcoin Similarity

5 June 2021

5 June 2021

Human civilizations tend to assign monetary worth to goods based on scarcity, among other factors. This is unquestionably true in...

World’s Oldest Murder

14 February 2021

14 February 2021

Researchers found a mass grave in a cave in Spain, now known as Sima de los Huesos, or the Pit...

Africa May not be Where the First Pre-Human First Appeared

22 March 2021

22 March 2021

According to one opinion: About 2 million years ago, our first ancestors moved north from their hometown and left Africa....

The Mystery of the Scythian Ice Maiden

1 June 2021

1 June 2021

A mummy of a tattooed Scythian-Siberian noblewoman is believed to have supernatural powers, but it’s stored in a museum because...

1,000-year-old Chicken Egg Found in Israel

9 June 2021

9 June 2021

Archaeologists discover almost fully intact but nearly empty egg and three rare Islamic-period bone dolls in excavation of settlement dating...

A Lynx Buried with Four Big Dogs in an Ancient Roman Well in Hungary

17 April 2024

17 April 2024

Archaeologists have discovered the skeleton of an adult male lynx accompanied by four big dogs in a Roman-era pit in...

The Worst Torture Device in History “Brazen Bull”

2 February 2021

2 February 2021

Agrigentum Tyranny today is in the provincial borders of Agrigento in the Sicily Autonomous Region in the southwest of Sicily....

The mystery of Cathedral of Salamanca’s astronaut figure, isn’t what people think it is

10 March 2022

10 March 2022

There is a photograph of an “astronaut” carved in a 16th century Spanish cathedral in Salamanca. Known as the Catedral...