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Neanderthal Facial Length Issue Settled
University Of Washington, St Louis ^ | 8-12-2003 | Susan Killenberg McGinn

Posted on 08/12/2003 7:53:24 PM PDT by blam

Contact: Susan Killenberg McGinn
susan_killenberg@aismail.wustl.edu
314-935-5254
Washington University in St. Louis

Neandertal facial length issue settled

About face: Washington University anthropologist sets the record straight regarding Neandertal facial length New scientific evidence challenges a common perception that Neandertals -- a close evolutionary relative to modern humans that lived 230,000 to 30,000 years ago -- possessed exceptionally long faces. Instead, a report authored by Erik Trinkaus, Ph.D., the Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor of Anthropology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, shows that modern humans are really the "odd man out" when it comes to facial lengths, which drop off dramatically compared with their ancestral predecessors.

Trinkaus' findings, which will appear in a summer 2003 issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), are based on two critical skull measurements on fossilized specimens. His article, "Neandertal faces were not long; modern human faces are short," will be available online the week of June 16 on the PNAS Web site, www.pnas.org.

Trinkaus' main objective was to see how Neandertal faces stacked up against others in the evolutionary lineage: 179 "recent humans" (dating back to the 18th century); 26 Late Pleistocene early modern humans; 24 Neandertals; and 23 archaic human Neandertal predecessors.

His research has effectively established a baseline for future anthropologists to categorize evolutionary patterns as being ancestral (having traits similar to those present in a remote ancestor) or derived (traits that have undergone a recent change).

"Basically, the issue is whether the 'big' Neandertal face is simply something they inherited from their ancestors, or whether it is something that is uniquely derived for them -- something that makes them divergent in human evolution," Trinkaus said. "This was just a short paper to demonstrate that Neandertals, put in their proper evolutionary context, do not have big faces; as the title says, modern humans have short ones."

In order to assess facial length, Trinkaus first measured the prosthion radius, or the distance that extends from the ear-hole out to the roots of the incisors. The second measurement, the mandibular superior length, is a projection of the linear distance from the middle of the condyles (a point on the jaw-joint) to the midpoint between the incisors. Together, the two measurements take into account how far the incisors project out relative to the core of the skull.

Data for older specimens -- which are limited both in number and by degree of preservation -- were taken from previously documented discoveries from around the world. For the recent humans, however, Trinkaus worked in a more hands-on fashion, spending a day measuring the skulls of 18th- and 19th-century "Old World humans" at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, which boasts the most geographically diverse sample of skeletons in North America.

After compiling the data for different groups of hominids, Trinkaus concluded that the Neandertal's overall facial projection was, if anything, average for a Pleistocene epoch sample and was similar to or even modestly reduced from their non-Neandertal archaic predecessors.

He also noted that their size was only moderately greater than those of early modern humans, but principally contrasted with recent, late Holocene humans (humans of today). Thus, from an evolutionary standpoint, there was nothing uniquely derived about Neandertal face lengths.

Still, Trinkaus sees several possible explanations for the misconception. First, the majority of the more complete Neandertal skulls that anthropologists have thus far unearthed happen to be those of large males, each of whose facial length scales with the rest of their body.

Trinkaus says there is also the influence of "time's arrow" -- that is, for most of the last century, Neandertals have been compared primarily with recent humans and not to their own predecessors. And quite simply, despite major discoveries over the last 40 years, no one had previously published a comprehensive study comparing Neandertal facial lengths to both recent humans and earlier ancestors.

"It was acceptable in 1950 to say Neandertals had big faces," Trinkaus said. "It's not acceptable in 2003."

Yet another possible reason was illustrated by the intense media fervor surrounding the 1999 discovery of a juvenile skeleton from Portugal. The skeleton is basically early modern human but bears some distinctive Neandertal characteristics, raising the possibility of interbreeding. Trinkaus asserts that the erroneous characterization that Neandertals had long faces may, at least in part, have been a way to distance ourselves from a more "primitive" evolutionary relation.

"Neandertals are the archaic humans that are closest to us," Trinkaus noted. "Closest to us in time, closest to us in behavior and in many aspects of their anatomy. They're very human but they're not quite us, and many people have great difficulty accepting that we may be closely linked to the Neandertals. Their world-view does not allow them to accept it because it downplays the idea that modern humans are very unique, that modern humans are very special."

So if Neandertals didn't have long faces, what's the significance of humans having short ones?

"As you go further back in time, the periods encompassed by a sample get bigger and bigger," Trinkaus concluded. "Faces basically remain long or decreased very slightly, but with modern humans they get a whole lot shorter very quickly. So the question is, 'why did they get shorter?' I don't know.

"But the point of this paper was not to answer that question, it was to allow us to frame that question. Because previously the question was, 'why did Neandertals have long faces?' And that's the wrong question.

"The correct question is -- 'why do modern humans have really short ones?'"


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: archaeology; facial; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; history; length; multiregionalism; neandertal; neanderthal; settled
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Maybe Neanderthals look French like John Kerry.

I will post a picture of the reconstructed face of the Neanderthal 'hybrid' mentioned in the article.

1 posted on 08/12/2003 7:53:25 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

Reconstructed Face Of The Neanderthal 'Hybrid' Child

2 posted on 08/12/2003 7:56:11 PM PDT by blam
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To: farmfriend
Ping.
3 posted on 08/12/2003 7:59:08 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
Looks like Chelsea
4 posted on 08/12/2003 8:06:20 PM PDT by sandmanbr
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To: sandmanbr

Just damn.

5 posted on 08/12/2003 8:24:27 PM PDT by martin_fierro (A v v n c v l v s M a x i m v s)
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To: martin_fierro
Pretty Woman, she is not.
6 posted on 08/12/2003 8:36:53 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: blam
The Neanderthal Theory
7 posted on 08/12/2003 8:38:00 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

This reconstruction depicts the adult male Neanderthal unearthed at the Amud cave site in Israel, who lived more than 50,000 years ago.

8 posted on 08/12/2003 8:43:24 PM PDT by blam
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: blam
Muttly has a Theory of the Brontosaurus.

Don't ask.
10 posted on 08/12/2003 8:47:49 PM PDT by PoorMuttly (A Muttly Bribed is a Muttly Earned)
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To: plusones
"Did they cross breed with 'people'? "

Most of the data indicate that they didn't. I still believe they did though.
Read the link in post #7.

11 posted on 08/12/2003 8:53:01 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
YEC INTREP
12 posted on 08/12/2003 9:36:05 PM PDT by LiteKeeper
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To: plusones
Please go to this link for some interesting information based on original research by Dr Jack Cuozzo

Audio recording of discussion on Neanderthal Man. Very enlightening

13 posted on 08/12/2003 9:40:03 PM PDT by LiteKeeper
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To: sandmanbr
Close, but it looks more like the kid in Mel's "Road Warrior" movie.
14 posted on 08/12/2003 10:08:18 PM PDT by 70times7 (An open mind is a cesspool of thought)
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To: blam
bump for later
15 posted on 08/12/2003 10:26:38 PM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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To: blam
Bump for later.
16 posted on 08/12/2003 11:41:56 PM PDT by goody2shooz
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To: blam; *Gods, Graves, Glyphs; carenot; CatoRenasci; ellery; Eva; freedom9; FreeLibertarian; ...
Gods, Graves, Glyphs
List for articles regarding early civilizations , life of all forms, - dinosaurs - etc.

Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this ping list.

17 posted on 08/12/2003 11:46:13 PM PDT by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: plusones
Did they cross breed with 'people'? I swear, I've seen folks who look Neandrathal
Yeah, and got to admit, even though I admire the guy and would vote for him for govinator if I was a Ca guy but Arnie sure looks Ne don't he? "Ach, silly, girlie sabre tooth tiger!"
18 posted on 08/12/2003 11:52:29 PM PDT by Cronos (Sanity and slam don't mix, consult your Imam...)
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To: farmfriend
ping
19 posted on 08/13/2003 4:56:41 AM PDT by genefromjersey (So little time - so many FLAMES to light !!)
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To: blam
I think this one looks more arab than anything else.

Why would beards be straight hair?

This location in Israel bolsters my theory that the "Holy Lands" have been a location of fighting among cultures "forever", all through the hundreds of thousands of years of glacial encroachments as it forced together northerners back onto southerners' lands in life or death struggles.

Fighting for one's tribe's cave, water, and grazing land must have been exhausting.

Urine tanned skins and furs would have made sweat and rain
moisened fashions a real statement.

Inter-"tribal" "marriages" for peace treaties must have been some task.

It is just too bad thqt they left almost no lasting records for us to learn of their lives. Like us of the the e-culture. Unplug us and no one can read our digital books or even acid paper newspapers and books of the 20th Century.

20 posted on 08/13/2003 6:30:38 AM PDT by SevenDaysInMay (Federal judges and justices serve for periods of good behavior, not life. Article III sec. 1)
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