Melbourne History Workshop is excited to be part of a team of researchers exploring the history of Melbourne teeth! Website coming soon.

During Victoria’s Big Build construction works in the city, archaeologists made a gruesome find at one of the excavation sites. Over 2000 human teeth were found in and around a collapsed metal drain pipe.
Research revealed that two dentists had operated on that section of Swanston Street in the late 1800s to the 1930s. Evidently, they had been discarding extracted teeth from their patients via their plumbing and other waste disposal means, resulting in over 2000 teeth remaining on the premises (including a large amount inside a metal drain pipe!).
Teeth are very good at recording information about our health, where we grew up and where our ancestors might have lived, what we do day-to-day and how we looked after our oral health (either through disease prevention or treatment).
Researchers from the University of Melbourne, an archaeology firm and Heritage Victoria are now studying these teeth. This team of researchers includes odontologists, archaeologists, anthropologists, historians and clinical dental experts. Using observational and sophisticated imaging and sampling techniques, these scientists are unearthing the stories of these early Melburnian dental patients. This project helps us to use these advanced methods and our understanding of how teeth grow and react to their environment to tell stories about the people living and going to the dentist at this time. It also gives us information about how Melbourne’s health changed over this time period, and we can test how that is different (or the same) in the health of modern Melburnians.
Rita Hardiman, Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences
Louise Shewan, Senior Research Fellow in Archaeological Science
Meg Goulding, CEO & Principal Cultural Heritage Advisor, Ochre Imprints
Ben Loveridge, Co-ordinator, Immersive Media, Learning Environments
Andy May, Professor, Faculty of Arts, Historical and Philosophical Studies
Julie Owen, Lecturer, MDHS
Jeremy Smith, Principal Archaeologist, Heritage Victoria, Heritage Victoria