Smithsonian Magazine (2024): Early Primates May Have Feasted on Soft, Sweet Fruits
ScieneNews (2024): Ancient primates’ unchipped teeth hint that they ate mostly fruit
IFLScience (2023): Early Primates' Favorite Snacks Were Probably Soft And Sweet
NewScientist (2023): Monkeys in Japan lost tooth enamel when their forest was destroyed
ScienceDaily (2022): Extinct 'monkey lemur' shows similarities to fossil humans
Scientific American (2022): Groovy Monkey Teeth Pose a Tool-Use Mystery
The Independent (2022): Strange marks in Japanese monkey teeth prompt rethink of human evolution
Forbes (2021): 3-Million-Year-Old ‘Nutcracker-Man’ Likely Didn’t Like Nuts At All
Archaeology (2019): Early Human Relative May Have Had Tooth Enamel Disorder
Science (2019): Disorder left ancient human relative with teeth pocked like golf balls
Science News (2017): Nitty-gritty of Homo naledi’s diet revealed in its teeth
Morning Report (RNZ, New Zealand): Research shows early primates liked sugar-heavy diets
RNZ New Zealand: Teeth research puts a question mark over diet evolution