ArdranG. M., KempF. H. and RideW. D. L. (1958) A radiographic analysis of mastication and swallowing in the domestic rabbit: Oryctolagus cuniculus (L), Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 130, 257–274.
2.
BarghusenH. R. (1972) The origin of the mammalian jaw apparatus, SchumacherG. H. (ed.), Morphology of the Maxillo-mandibular Apparatus, Leipzig, Thieme, 26–32.
3.
ButlerP. M. (1952) The milk molars of Perissodactyla, with remarks on molar occlusion, Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 121, 777–817.
4.
ButlerP. M. (1967) The prenatal development of the human first upper permanent molar, Archives of Oral Biology, 12, 551–563.
5.
ButlerP. M. (1972a) Serial homology and growth in the human dentition, SchumacherG. H. (ed.), Morphology of the Maxillo-mandibular Apparatus, Leipzig, Thieme, 48–52.
6.
ButlerP. M. (1972b) Some functional aspects of molar patternEvolution, 26, 474–483.
7.
ButlerP. M. (1973) Molar wear facets of early Tertiary North American primates, Symposium of the 4th International Congress of Primatology, 3, 1–27.
8.
ButlerP. M. and MillsJ. R. E. (1959) A contribution to the odontology ofOreopithecus, Bulletin of the British Museum, (Natural History), Part A. Geology, 4, 1–26.
9.
CopeE. D. (1889) The mechanical causes of the development of the hard parts of the Mammalia, Journal of Morphology, 3, 137–277
10.
CromptonA. W. (1963) The evolution of the mammalian jaw, Evolution, 17, 431–439.
11.
CromptonA. W. (1972) The evolution of the jaw articulation of cynodonts, JoyseyK. A. and KempT. S. (eds.), Studies in Vertebrate Evolution, Edinburgh, Oliver and Boyd, 231–251.
12.
CromptonA. W. and HiiemäeK. (1969) How mammalian molar teeth work, Discovery, 5, 23–34.
13.
CromptonA. W. and HiiemäeK. (1970) Molar occlusion and mandibular movements during occlusion in the American opossum Didelphis marsupialis (L), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 49, 21–47.
14.
HiiemäeK. M. and KayR. F. (1973) Evolutionary trends in the dynamics of primate mastication, Symposium of the 4th International Congress of Primatology, 3, 28–64.
15.
MarshallP. M. and ButlerP. M. (1966) Molar cusp development in the bat, Hipposiderus beatus, with reference to the ontogenetic basis of occlusion, Archives of Oral Biology, 11, 949–965.
16.
MillsJ. R. E. (1955) Ideal dental occlusion in the primates, Dental Practitioner, 6, 47–61.
17.
MillsJ. R. E. (1963) Occlusion and malocclusion of the teeth of primates, BrothwellD. R. (ed.), Dental Anthropology, London, Pergamon Press, 29–51.
18.
MillsJ. R. E. (1964) The dentitions of Peramus and Amphitherium, Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London, 175, 117–133.
19.
RyderJ. A. (1878–79) On the mechanical genesis of tooth forms, Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1878, 45–80 and 1879, 47–51.
20.
ScapinoR. P. (1965) The third joint of the canine jaw, Journal of Morphology, 116, 23–50.
21.
SchultzA. H. (1962) Some factors influencing the social life of primates in general and of early man in particular, WashburnS. L. (ed.), Social Life of Early Man, London, Methuen, 58–90.