A man’s lower jaw recovered from a medieval church in Aberdeen reveals the oldest known use of a dental bridge in Scotland, a new study finds. The gold wire, called a ligature, was installed around two teeth about 500 years ago to span the gap created by a lost tooth.

“The application of the ligature would likely have caused some discomfort during the procedure,” Rebecca Crozier, a bioarchaeologist at the University of Aberdeen and co-author of the new study on the jawbone, told Live Science in an email. But the man, who was middle-aged when he died between 1460 and 1670, “would have most likely gotten used to the presence of the wire over time and probably stopped noticing it,” she said.

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