Incisor
Incisor
Section titled “Incisor”Definition
Section titled “Definition”An incisor is a front tooth often associated with cutting, cropping, gnawing, or grasping food.
Incisors vary across animals and should be interpreted as part of the whole dentition, not in isolation.
Why It Matters
Section titled “Why It Matters”Incisors are useful in teaching because they are often easy to locate and compare.
They can introduce students to the relationship between tooth position, shape, and possible function.
How to Read It
Section titled “How to Read It”Ask:
- Where is the tooth positioned?
- Is it broad, narrow, chisel-like, pointed, or reduced?
- How does it compare with canine, premolar, or molar teeth?
- What other evidence is needed before making a diet inference?
Teaching Use
Section titled “Teaching Use”Ask students to compare incisors across three dentition examples and describe shape before discussing possible function.
Related Terms
Section titled “Related Terms”Public Sources
Section titled “Public Sources”Public sources will be added as this entry is reviewed and expanded.
Scope Note
Section titled “Scope Note”This entry explains tooth terminology for public education. It does not provide species identification, forensic interpretation, handling, preparation, or biological material processing guidance.