Subset: how micro-wear may not fully reflect the diets actually eaten
<B-1> "micro-wear is probably not as a definite result of diets of dinners." Soft-bodied insect do not wear teeth of dinners. (For example, insect eating, which can cause distinct micro-wear patterns, would not cause much tooth abrasion in modern baboons, who eat only soft-bodied insects rather than hard-bodied insects.) CR logic: micro-wear is not representative enough.
<B-2> The reference group may have great variances. (In addition, the diets of current omnivorous primates vary considerably depending on the environments that different groups within a primate species inhabit; if australopithecines were omnivores too, we might expect to find considerable population variation in their tooth micro-wear patterns.)
<B-3> Conclusion derived by using micro-wear patterns needs to be explanded. (Thus, Walker's description of possible australopithecine diets may need to be expanded to include a much more diverse diet.)