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. 2015 Jul 8;10(7):e0131181. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0131181

Fig 11. The Pleistocene human teeth from southern Italy discovered by A. Palma di Cesnola.

Fig 11

A. left dM2 referred to layer L of Cavallo (the A-tooth); B. left dM1 referred to level E-III of Cavallo (the B-tooth); C. dM2 referred to level E-II/I of Cavallo (the C-tooth: left according to ref. [12], right according to ref. [15]); D. left M1 referred to layer 6 of Poggio (the D-tooth). The white rectangles mark the tuberculum molare of the B-tooth and the Carabelli cusp of the D-tooth. Provenience is according to refs. [2,12,54]. Photos by S. Benazzi and reproduced with permission.