Fukase Hitoshi, Kondo Osamu, Ishida Hajime
Division of Human Evolution Studies, Graduate School of Medicine, Hokkaido University, Hokkaido, 060-8638, Japan.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2015 Mar;156(3):482-8. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22665. Epub 2014 Nov 11.
Evolutionary and functional significance of the human chin has long been explored from various perspectives including masticatory biomechanics, speech, and anterior tooth size. Recent ontogenetic studies have indicated that the spatial position of internally forming anterior teeth partially constrains adult mandibular symphyseal morphology. The present study therefore preliminarily examined the size and placement of developing anterior teeth in immature Neanderthal mandibles of Dederiyeh 1 and 2, compared with similarly-aged modern humans (N = 16) and chimpanzees (N = 7) whose incisors are comparatively small and large among extant hominids, respectively. The Dederiyeh 1 mandible is described as slightly presenting a mental trigone and attendant mental fossa, whereas Dederiyeh 2 completely lacks such chin-associated configurations. Results showed that, despite symphyseal size being within the modern human range, both Dederiyeh mandibles accommodated overall larger anterior dentition and displayed a remarkably wide bicanine space compared to those of modern humans. Dederiyeh 2 had comparatively thicker deciduous incisor roots and more enlarged permanent incisor crypts than Dederiyeh 1, but both Dederiyeh individuals exhibited a total dental size mostly intermediate between modern humans and chimpanzees. These findings potentially imply that the large deciduous/permanent incisors collectively distended the labial alveolar bone, obscuring an incipient mental trigone. It is therefore hypothesized that the appearance of chin-associated features, particularly of the mental trigone and fossa, can be accounted for partly by developmental relationships between the sizes of the available mandibular space and anterior teeth. This hypothesis must be, however, further addressed with more referential samples in future studies.
长期以来,人们从咀嚼生物力学、言语和前牙大小等多个角度探讨了人类下巴的进化和功能意义。最近的个体发育研究表明,内部形成的前牙的空间位置部分限制了成年下颌联合部的形态。因此,本研究初步检查了德德雷耶1号和2号未成熟尼安德特人下颌骨中发育中的前牙的大小和位置,并与年龄相仿的现代人类(N = 16)和黑猩猩(N = 7)进行了比较,在现存的原始人中,黑猩猩的门牙分别相对较小和较大。德德雷耶1号下颌骨被描述为略呈颏三角和伴随的颏窝,而德德雷耶2号则完全没有这种与下巴相关的结构。结果表明,尽管联合部大小在现代人类范围内,但与现代人类相比,德德雷耶的两个下颌骨容纳的前牙总体上更大,并且显示出明显更宽的双尖牙间隙。与德德雷耶1号相比,德德雷耶2号的乳牙切牙根相对较厚,恒牙切牙隐窝更大,但德德雷耶的两个个体的牙齿总大小大多介于现代人类和黑猩猩之间。这些发现可能意味着大的乳牙/恒牙切牙共同使唇侧牙槽骨扩张,掩盖了早期的颏三角。因此,据推测,与下巴相关的特征,特别是颏三角和颏窝的出现,部分可以由可用下颌空间和前牙大小之间的发育关系来解释。然而,这一假设在未来的研究中必须用更多的参考样本进一步探讨。