Surprisingly rapid growth in Neanderthals
Life-history traits correlate closely with dental growth 1 , so differences in dental growth within Homo can enable us to determine how somatic development has evolved and to identify developmental shifts that warrant species-level distinctions 2 , 3 , 4 . Dental growth can be determined from the sp...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2004-04, Vol.428 (6986), p.936-939 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Life-history traits correlate closely with dental growth
1
, so differences in dental growth within
Homo
can enable us to determine how somatic development has evolved and to identify developmental shifts that warrant species-level distinctions
2
,
3
,
4
. Dental growth can be determined from the speed of enamel formation (or extension rate)
5
,
6
. We analysed the enamel extension rate in
Homo antecessor
(8 teeth analysed),
Homo heidelbergensis
(106),
Homo neanderthalensis
(‘Neanderthals’; 146) and Upper Palaeolithic-Mesolithic
Homo sapiens
(100). Here we report that Upper Palaeolithic-Mesolithic
H. sapiens
shared an identical dental development pattern with modern humans, but that
H. antecessor
and
H. heidelbergensis
had shorter periods of dental growth. Surprisingly, Neanderthals were characterized by having the shortest period of dental growth. Because dental growth is an excellent indicator of somatic development
1
, our results suggest that Neanderthals developed faster even than their immediate ancestor,
H. heidelbergensis
. Dental growth became longer and brain size increased from the Plio-Pleistocene in hominid evolution. Neanderthals, despite having a large brain, were characterized by a short period of development. This autapomorphy in growth is an evolutionary reversal, and points strongly to a specific distinction between
H. sapiens
and
H. neanderthalensis
. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nature02428 |