A comparative study of stereolithographically modelled skulls of Petralona and Broken Hill: implications for future studies of middle Pleistocene hominid evolution

Computer generated three-dimensional stereolithographic models of middle Pleistocene skulls from Petralona and Broken Hill are described and compared. The anterior cranial fossae of these models are also compared with that of another middle Pleistocene skull, Arago 21. Stereolithographic modelling r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of human evolution 1997-12, Vol.33 (6), p.691-703
Hauptverfasser: Seidler, Horst, Falk, Dean, Stringer, Chris, Wilfing, Harald, Müller, Gerd B, zur Nedden, Dieter, Weber, Gerhard W, Reicheis, Wolfgang, Arsuaga, Jean-Luis
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container_end_page 703
container_issue 6
container_start_page 691
container_title Journal of human evolution
container_volume 33
creator Seidler, Horst
Falk, Dean
Stringer, Chris
Wilfing, Harald
Müller, Gerd B
zur Nedden, Dieter
Weber, Gerhard W
Reicheis, Wolfgang
Arsuaga, Jean-Luis
description Computer generated three-dimensional stereolithographic models of middle Pleistocene skulls from Petralona and Broken Hill are described and compared. The anterior cranial fossae of these models are also compared with that of another middle Pleistocene skull, Arago 21. Stereolithographic modelling reproduces not only the outer surfaces of skulls, but also features within the substance of the bones, and details of the internal braincase. The skulls of Petralona and, to a somewhat lesser degree, Broken Hill are extremely pneumatized. Previously undescribed features associated with pneumatization are detailed, along with their possible functional significance, polarity, and potential for understanding hominid cranial variation. Petralona and Broken Hill also exhibit a dramatic suite of cerebral features that is probably related to extensive pneumatization of the skull, namely frontal lobes that are tilted and located behind rather than over the orbits, laterally flared temporal lobes, marked occipital projection, and basal location of the cerebellum. Comparison of the anterior cranial fossae of Petralona, Broken Hill, and Arago 21 suggests that external resemblance of skulls may not always correlate with endocranial similarity. We believe that stereolithographic reconstructions have the potential for helping to resolve difficult questions about the origins of Neanderthal and anatomically modern people.
doi_str_mv 10.1006/jhev.1997.0163
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subjects 3D-reconstruction
Animals
Anthropological methods
Archaeology
Australia
Biological Evolution
computer-tomography
endocranial morphology
Hominidae - anatomy & histology
Hominidae - classification
Human paleontology
Humans
Methodology and general studies
middle Pleistocene hominids
Models, Anatomic
pneumatisation
Prehistory and protohistory
Skull - anatomy & histology
Skull - diagnostic imaging
Spain
Stereolithography
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
title A comparative study of stereolithographically modelled skulls of Petralona and Broken Hill: implications for future studies of middle Pleistocene hominid evolution
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