Growth, Development, and Life History throughout the Evolution of Homo
For over a century, paleoanthropologists have listed the presence of prolonged periods of gestation, growth, and maturation, extremely short interbirth intervals, and early weaning among the key features that distinguish modern humans from our extant ape cousins. Exactly when and how this particular...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Current anthropology 2012-12, Vol.53 (S6), p.S395-S408 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | For over a century, paleoanthropologists have listed the presence of prolonged
periods of gestation, growth, and maturation, extremely short interbirth
intervals, and early weaning among the key features that distinguish modern
humans from our extant ape cousins. Exactly when and how this particular
scheduling of important developmental milestones-termed a "life
history profile"-came to characterize Homo sapiens
is not entirely clear. Researchers have suggested that the modern human life
history profile appeared either at the base of the hominin radiation (ca. 6 Ma),
with the origins of the genus Homo (ca. 2.5 Ma), or much later
in time, perhaps only with H. sapiens (ca. 200-100 Ka).
In this short review, evidence of the pace of growth and maturation in fossil
australopiths and early members of Homo is detailed to evaluate
the merits of each of these scenarios. New data on the relationship between
dental development and life history in extant apes are synthesized within the
context of life history theory and developmental variation across modern human
groups. Future directions, including new analytical tools for extracting more
refined life history parameters as well as integrative biomechanical and
developmental models of facial growth are also discussed. |
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ISSN: | 0011-3204 1537-5382 |
DOI: | 10.1086/667591 |