Department of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, 72701, USA.
Department of Neuroscience, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Department of Anthropology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Human Evolution Research Institute, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
J Hum Evol. 2018 Aug;121:55-71. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2018.03.009. Epub 2018 Apr 30.
As the interface between the mandible and cranium, the mandibular ramus is functionally significant and its morphology has been suggested to be informative for taxonomic and phylogenetic analyses. In primates, and particularly in great apes and humans, ramus morphology is highly variable, especially in the shape of the coronoid process and the relationship of the ramus to the alveolar margin. Here we compare ramus shape variation through ontogeny in Homo neanderthalensis to that of modern and fossil Homo sapiens using geometric morphometric analyses of two-dimensional semilandmarks and univariate measurements of ramus angulation and relative coronoid and condyle height. Results suggest that ramus, especially coronoid, morphology varies within and among subadult and adult modern human populations, with the Alaskan Inuit being particularly distinct. We also identify significant differences in overall anterosuperior ramus and coronoid shapes between H. sapiens and H. neanderthalensis, both in adults and throughout ontogeny. These shape differences are subtle, however, and we therefore suggest caution when using ramus morphology to diagnose group membership for individual specimens of these taxa. Furthermore, we argue that these morphologies are unlikely to be representative of differences in masticatory biomechanics and/or paramasticatory behaviors between Neanderthals and modern humans, as has been suggested by previous authors. Assessments of ontogenetic patterns of shape change reveal that the typical Neanderthal ramus morphology is established early in ontogeny, and there is little evidence for divergent postnatal ontogenetic allometric trajectories between Neanderthals and modern humans as a whole. This analysis informs our understanding of intraspecific patterns of mandibular shape variation and ontogeny in H. sapiens and can shed further light on overall developmental and life history differences between H. sapiens and H. neanderthalensis.
作为下颌骨和颅骨之间的界面,下颌支在功能上非常重要,其形态结构被认为对分类学和系统发生分析具有重要意义。在灵长类动物中,特别是在大型猿类和人类中,下颌支形态结构高度多样化,尤其是喙突的形状和下颌支与牙槽缘的关系。在这里,我们通过对二维半标志和下颌支角度和相对喙突和髁突高度的单变量测量的几何形态测量分析,比较了尼安德特人和现代和化石智人的下颌支形态结构在个体发育中的变化。结果表明,下颌支,特别是喙突,形态在亚成年和成年现代人之间存在差异,阿拉斯加因纽特人尤其明显。我们还发现了 H. sapiens 和 H. neanderthalensis 之间在总体前上支和喙突形状上的显著差异,无论是在成年人中还是在整个个体发育过程中。然而,这些形状差异很细微,因此我们建议在使用下颌支形态结构来诊断这些分类群的个体标本的群体归属时要谨慎。此外,我们认为这些形态结构不太可能代表尼安德特人和现代人之间咀嚼生物力学和/或副咀嚼行为的差异,正如之前的作者所提出的那样。对形态变化的个体发育模式的评估表明,典型的尼安德特人下颌支形态结构在个体发育早期就已经建立,并且没有证据表明尼安德特人和现代人之间在整个个体发育过程中有不同的出生后生长轨迹。这项分析有助于我们理解人类下颌骨形态结构的种内变异模式和个体发育,并进一步揭示了人类和尼安德特人之间整体发育和生活史的差异。