Dentistry
- Interesting??
I bet you didn't think it was possible, but here are a few dental fun facts
that may find you saying "Wow, I didn't know that!"
- Each person's set of
teeth is unique - much like their fingerprints - even in identical twins.
- Some cheeses have been
found to protect teeth from
decay.
- The Mexican version
of the Tooth Fairy is known as the Tooth Mouse, which takes the tooth and
leaves treasures in its place.
- If you're right handed,
you will chew your food on your right side. If you're left handed, you will
tend to chew your food on your left side.
- The major causes of
tooth loss in people under age 35 are sports, accidents and fights.
- George Washington's
dentures were made from walrus, hippopotamus, and cows' teeth, as well as
elephant tusks.
- The most valuable tooth
was one a nobleman purchased - belonging to the famous scientists Isaac
Newton - for $4,560. It was set in a ring.
- In 200 AD, the Romans
used a mixture of bones, eggshells, oyster shells and honey to clean their
teeth.
- Queen Elizabeth's
teeth were noticeably discolored. A German traveler, Paul Henter, speculated
that the discoloration was due to the Queen's excessive consumption of sugar,
making the first recorded association between sugar and tooth decay.
- The second most common
disease in the United States is tooth decay. The first is the common cold.
Animal Chompers
- Ants can lift an object
up to fifty times their body-weight and carry it over their heads. They
don't do this with their feet, but with their mouths.
- Crocodiles don't clean
their own teeth - they let a plover
(little bird) pick their teeth for scraps of leftover food.
- The largest toothed
mammal in the world is the sperm whale. A whale's lower jaw, measuring 16'
5" long, is exhibited in the British Museum of Natural History in London.
The whale it belonged to reportedly measured 84 feet in length.
- A snail can have about
25,000 teeth (on its tongue).
- Horses teeth are extremely
long and grow continually. They wear down, change shape and become discolored
as they grow, so we can really tell a horse's age by looking at his teeth.
- A shark's teeth are
literally as hard as steel.

7729 79th
Street South - Cottage Grove, MN 55016 - Phone: 651.459.6674 -
e-mail: info@orthodonticsbyhipple.com
- www.orthodonticsbyhipple.com
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