M. Cox et al., Eighteenth and nineteenth century dental restoration, treatment and consequences in a British nobleman, BR DENT J, 189(11), 2000, pp. 593-596
This paper examines unusual eighteenth and nineteenth century dental treatm
ent and its consequences, in a nobleman excavated from beneath St. Nicholas
' Church, Sevenoaks, Rent, UK in the early 1990s, This rare archaeological
case exhibits erosion of dental enamel on the labial surface of ail the ant
erior dentition. A programme of historical research suggests that this migh
t be attributed to the application of an acid-based dental tincture or the
use of an abrasive substance to whiten the teeth. Palliative treatment for
the consequence of this application was prescribed by Dr Robert Blake of Du
blin. Further, it bears witness to three dental restorations, two of gold a
nd one tin. The two gold (foil) fillings are an occlusal in the upper-right
second molar and a cervical on the labial surface of the upper left canine
. The tin filling is an occlusal in the upper left second molar. Excavation
of the carious tissue appears to have been undertaken using a spoon shaped
implement.