
 Overview
This
dental insignia was adopted by the American
Dental Association in November
1965 as the official emblem of dentistry.
The design uses as its central figure
a serpent entwined about an ancient Arabian
cautery in the manner of the single serpent
of Aesculapius, the Greek god of medicine,
coiled about a rod.
The Greek letter Δ (delta),
for dentistry, and the Greek letter Ο
(omicron), for
odont (tooth) form the periphery of the
design.
In the background of the design are 32
leaves and 20 berries, representative
of the permanent and temporary teeth.
The suggested colors for the insignia
are: the background, a shade of lilac—the
official academic color of dentistry;
the letter Ο in gold; the letter Δ in
black; the cautery in gold outlined in
black, and the leaves, berries and serpent
merely outlined in black on the lilac
background.
The National Association of Dental Faculties
in 1897 chose the color lilac as the profession’s
major color. The color trims dental schools’ graduation
gowns and caps and may be found in dental
banners, emblems, insignia, signs, symbols
and publications.
Please note: The Emblem of Dentistry images are copyright free and can be used without permission.
Download the Emblem/Insignia of
Dentistry
- Black & White (300dpi) | JPG file/112k

- Color (300dpi) | JPG file/103k
To Download the JPGs:
- Select the link of image you want and image will open in window (it will appear small and look fuzzy).
- Right click on the image.
- Select the Save Picture As... option from the pull-down menu that appears.
- Choose the destination file where you want to save the image.
- Select Save and the image will begin to download to the chosen location.
Please note: these JPG images are high resolution and suitable for use in print ads and publications. These images can be resized and optimized for Web use as well.
Please note: The ADA does not provide specific answers
to individual questions about fees, dental problems, conditions, diagnoses,
treatments or proposed treatments, or requests for research. Information about
dental referrals, complaints and a variety of dental procedures may
be found here. You can also refer to our Frequently
Asked Questions page for answers to common questions.
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