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Midsagittal Cranial Shape Variation in the Genus Homo by Geometric Morphometrics

Emiliano Bruner
Barbara Saracino
Francesca Ricci
Maryanne Tafuri
Pietro Passarello
Giorgio Manzi


Puni tekst: engleski pdf 680 Kb

str. 99-112

preuzimanja: 1.200

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Sažetak

Midsagittal profiles of crania referred to different taxa of the genus Homo have been analyzed by geometric morphometric techniques. Comparisons between single specimens using the thin-plate-spline function suggest a generalized reduction of the lower face, associated with antero-posterior development of the braincase occurring (possibly in parallel evolution) along distinct human lineages. Furthermore, Neandertals display a projection of the midface, and modern humans show a derived globularity of the vault associated with midsagittal parietal bulging. Principal Component Analysis demonstrates a bimodal pattern of variation, which describes an »archaic« pole (rather heterogeneous in terms of taxonomy) clearly distinguishable from the modern one. The first two principal components – that explain together 80% of the total variance in shape – involve respectively fronto-parietal expansion and midfacial prognathism. These results contribute to identify different structural patterns in human evolution, supporting discontinuity rather than continuity of cranial shape among different taxa of the genus Homo, especially when considering the differences between Neandertals and early modern humans.

Ključne riječi

cranial shape; geometric morphometry; genus Homo

Hrčak ID:

4890

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/4890

Datum izdavanja:

15.6.2004.

Posjeta: 2.140 *