Tooth crown lengths, breadths, and areas were compared from five seque
ntial human skeletal samples from the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico, spanni
ng the period from 1600 BC to AD 1521. Almost all of the measurements
considered exhibited dramatic reduction over that period. Total crown
area declined from 1320 mm(2) to 1262 mm(2), a change of 4.4% or 9.4 d
arwins, which is noticeably larger than any previously reported rate o
f dental reduction in a recent human population. This reduction was gr
eatest in posterior tooth breadths, especially in the mandible. The pa
tterning of the reduction, and of the variance of the measurements, in
dicates that natural selection was primarily responsible for the chang
e. Of all the measurements, anterior breadths appear to have been the
least: subject to selection, and posterior lengths the next least. The
degree of reduction suggests that selective pressures towards smaller
teeth were greater in Mesoamerica than elsewhere. This case provides
an example of the value of recent human skeletal series for the study
of microevolutionary processes. (C) 1998 Academic Press Limited.