Publications
| Title | Abstract | Year Filter | PMID(sorted ascending) Filter |
|---|
| [essence and significance of surgery. part i -- birth of surgery: determining factors and contexts]. | the author intends to particularly analyse the origin of surgery as regards its deterministic factors and contexts, resounding the essence and the meaning of surgery itself. the primary core of the surgical practice dates back to prehistoric times, when, driven by his self-preservation instinct, the cave man, when suffering from some trauma, performed on himself a series of more or less immediate "actions" in order to remain healthy. at the same time, a second meaningful nucleus of the surgical ... | 2001 | 11865690 |
| evidence for interpersonal violence in the st. cesaire neanderthal. | the st. césaire 1 neanderthal skeleton of a young adult individual is unique in its association with châtelperronian artifacts from a level dated to ca. 36,000 years ago. computer-tomographic imaging and computer-assisted reconstruction of the skull revealed a healed fracture in the cranial vault. when paleopathological and forensic diagnostic standards are applied, the bony scar bears direct evidence for the impact of a sharp implement, which was presumably directed toward the individual during ... | 2002 | 11972028 |
| new middle pleistocene human remains from northern italy. | the description of several teeth and a fragment of mandible found in the visogliano rock-shelter (northern italy) is presented in this paper. the teeth have been analysed from a morphological and metrical point of view and compared with other specimens of homo erectus, archaic homo sapiens and homo neanderthalensis. the md and bl diameters and the peculiar dental features are archaic and support the antiquity of the specimens. microwear analysis of visogliano teeth show various dietary strategie ... | 2002 | 12018119 |
| cross-sectional geometry and morphology of the mandibular symphysis in middle and late pleistocene homo. | studies of the evolutionary emergence of the human "chin" have been investigated from a phylogenetic perspective during the later pleistocene or from a biomechanical perspective across extant primates. since it was during the middle and late pleistocene that the distinctive human mentum osseum emerged, the relationship between mentum osseum form and resistance to mechanical stress at the mandibular symphysis was examined for forty-two middle and late pleistocene human mandibles. mentum osseum va ... | 2002 | 12098211 |
| common patterns of facial ontogeny in the hominid lineage. | recent evaluation of neanderthal and modern human ontogeny suggests that taxon-specific features arose very early in development in both lineages, with early, possibly prenatal, morphological divergence followed by parallel postnatal developmental patterns. here we use morphometric techniques to compare hominoid facial growth patterns, and show that this developmental phenomenon is, in fact, not unique to comparisons between neanderthals and modern humans but extends to australopithecus africanu ... | 2002 | 12124900 |
| a closer look at neanderthal postcanine dental morphology: the mandibular dentition. | neanderthals are known to exhibit unique incisor morphology as well as enlarged pulp chambers in postcanine teeth (taurodontism). recent studies suggest that their overall dental pattern (i.e., in morphologic trait frequencies) is also unique. however, what this means in a phylogenetic sense is not known. although exploring the polarity of dental morphologic characters is essential to understanding the phylogenetic implications of unique patterns of variation, few have undertaken this task. this ... | 2002 | 12124901 |
| late pleistocene human femoral diaphyseal curvature. | anterior femoral curvature is a consistent characteristic of pleistocene and recent humans, although variation exists in the degree of curvature among individuals and across populations. in particular, one group, the neandertals, has been characterized for a century as having marked femoral curvature. to evaluate the degree of anterior femoral curvature in both neandertals and other late pleistocene humans, their curvature subtenses and proximodistal positions were evaluated in the context of re ... | 2002 | 12124915 |
| a reanalysis of the ancient mitochondrial dna sequences recovered from neandertal bones. | recent reports analyzing mitochondrial dna sequences from neandertal bones have claimed that neandertals and modern humans are different species. the phylogenetic analyses carried out in these articles did not take into account the high substitution rate variation among sites observed in the human mitochondrial d-loop region and also lack an estimation of the parameters of the nucleotide substitution model. the separate phylogenetic position of neandertals is not supported when these factors are ... | 2002 | 12140248 |
| the angular distribution of vertebral trabeculae in modern humans, chimpanzees and the kebara 2 neanderthal. | bone is known to remodel to optimize its structure according to its mechanical environment. in particular trabecular arcades are thought to align with the orientations of components of principal strain. this paper presents the application of a novel method for quantifying trabecular orientation to test the hypothesis that hominoid posture and locomotion are reflected in trabecular architecture. lateral radiographs were taken of vertebrae from the entire thoracolumbar spines of eight modern human ... | 2002 | 12160715 |
| inactivation of cmp-n-acetylneuraminic acid hydroxylase occurred prior to brain expansion during human evolution. | humans are genetically deficient in the common mammalian sialic acid n-glycolylneuraminic acid (neu5gc) because of an alu-mediated inactivating mutation of the gene encoding the enzyme cmp-n-acetylneuraminic acid (cmp-neu5ac) hydroxylase (cmah). this mutation occurred after our last common ancestor with bonobos and chimpanzees, and before the origin of present-day humans. here, we take multiple approaches to estimate the timing of this mutation in relationship to human evolutionary history. firs ... | 2002 | 12192086 |
| neandertal cold adaptation: physiological and energetic factors. | european neandertals employed a complex set of physiological cold defenses, homologous to those seen in contemporary humans and nonhuman primates. while neandertal morphological patterns, such as foreshortened extremities and low relative surface-area, may have explained some of the variance in cold resistance, it is suggested the adaptive package was strongly dependent on a rich array of physiological defenses. a summary of the environmental cold conditions in which the neandertals lived is pre ... | 2010 | 12203812 |
| a lost neanderthal neonate found. | fossil remains of adult neanderthals are well documented, but juvenile specimens are rare and information about them is scant. here we identify a beautifully preserved skeleton that has been lost to science for almost 90 years as the neanderthal neonate known as 'le moustier 2', which was originally found at le moustier in the dordogne, southwest france. this find will be a rich source of data for studying the evolution of human ontogeny as well as the phylogenetic relationship between these ext ... | 2002 | 12214223 |
| the mandibular canal of the "old man" of cro-magnon: anatomical-radiological study. | the radiological study of the 'old man' of cro-magnon mandible complements the one published about the mandibular canal of the "neanderthal man" of la chapelle-aux-saints with which it is compared. | 2002 | 12231201 |
| the neandertal type site revisited: interdisciplinary investigations of skeletal remains from the neander valley, germany. | the 1856 discovery of the neandertal type specimen (neandertal 1) in western germany marked the beginning of human paleontology and initiated the longest-standing debate in the discipline: the role of neandertals in human evolutionary history. we report excavations of cave sediments that were removed from the feldhofer caves in 1856. these deposits have yielded over 60 human skeletal fragments, along with a large series of paleolithic artifacts and faunal material. our analysis of this material ... | 2002 | 12232049 |
| the gravettian occipital bone from the site of malladetes (barx, valencia, spain). | the juvenile occipital bone from the site of malladetes in valencia (spain) is described and compared with other european pleistocene representatives of the genus homo. this specimen derives from a gravettian cultural context and has been ams radiocarbon-dated to 25,120 +/- 240 years bp. as such, it provides evidence on early modern human anatomy from the central mediterranean region of the iberian peninsula. the clear evidence for a late survival of neandertals in southern iberia, has led to co ... | 2002 | 12234549 |
| the late neandertal supraorbital fossils from vindija cave, croatia: a biased sample? | the late neandertal sample from vindija (croatia) has been described as transitional between the earlier central european neandertals from krapina (croatia) and modern humans. however, the morphological differences indicating this transition may rather be the result of different sex and/or age compositions between the samples. this study tests the hypothesis that the metric differences between the krapina and vindija supraorbital samples are due to sampling bias. we focus upon the supraorbital r ... | 2002 | 12234551 |
| mandibular condyle traits in neanderthals and other homo: a comparative, correlative, and ontogenetic study. | the relationship between the mandibular condyle and the crest of the mandibular notch (cmn) has historically entered into discussions of neanderthal characteristics and was recently suggested to be autapomorphic in neanderthals. the neanderthal cmn has been described as intersecting the condyle in the middle, while the modern human cmn runs to the condyle's lateral end. a large lateral condylar tubercle (lct) has also been observed in neanderthals and thought to be related to medial (or less lat ... | 2002 | 12237935 |
| evolutionary genetics and infertility. | mapping the human genome and advances in human evolution indicate a critical role for genetics in the study of reproduction. | 2002 | 12322895 |
| does homo neanderthalensis play a role in modern human ancestry? the mandibular evidence. | data obtained from quantifying the upper part of the mandibular ramus (the coronoid process, the condylar process, and the notch between them) lead us to conclude that neanderthals (both european and middle eastern) differ more from homo sapiens (early specimens such as tabun ii, skhul, and qafzeh, as well as contemporary populations from as far apart as alaska and australia) than the latter differs from homo erectus. the specialized neanderthal mandibular ramus morphology emerges as yet another ... | 2002 | 12365031 |
| body size and postcranial robusticity of european upper paleolithic hominins. | the robust diaphyses of pleistocene hominins are said to indicate higher activity levels in these prehistoric humans than among people today. thus, it could be argued that the prediction of body mass from fossil lower limb diaphyseal cortical area (ca) using recent human regressions might lead to erroneously high body mass estimates. this study uses three body mass prediction formulae based on the following features: reconstructed femoral 80% (subtrochanteric) ca, femoral head diameter (fh), and ... | 2002 | 12393006 |
| middle pleistocene human remains from the bau de l'aubesier. | excavations in later middle pleistocene levels at the bau de l'aubesier, vaucluse, france yielded a maxillary molar (m(1) or m(2); aubesier 10) and a partial mandible from the left c(1) alveolus to the right condylar base lacking the coronoid process (aubesier 11). dentally they are similar to other later middle pleistocene europeans in dental dimensions and variable taurodontism (aubesier 10 but not aubesier 11). the small aubesier 11 mandible exhibits a retreating symphyseal profile with a min ... | 2002 | 12457854 |
| morphological affinities of the sal'a 1 frontal bone. | the human frontal bone from sal'a, slovak republic, has previously entered into discussions of the morphological patterns of central european neandertals and the origins of early modern humans in that region. a morphological reassessment of its supraorbital region and a morphometric analysis of its overall proportions indicate that it falls well within expected ranges of variation of late pleistocene neandertals and is separate from european earlier upper paleolithic early modern human crania. i ... | 2002 | 12473484 |
| a brief review of the archaeological evidence for palaeolithic and neolithic subsistence. | knowledge of our ancestor's diets is becoming increasingly important in evolutionary medicine, as researchers have argued that we have evolved to specific type of 'palaeolithic' diet, and many modern nutritional disorders relate to the mismatch between the diet to which we have evolved, and the relatively newer agricultural-based 'neolithic' diets. however, what is the archaeological evidence for pre-agricultural diets and how have they changed over the four million years of hominid evolution? t ... | 2002 | 12494313 |
| [the skull of combe capelle]. | since the end of world war ii two of the most important anthropological artefacts of the museum für vor- und frühgeschichte in berlin, the skulls and skeletons of le moustier and combe capelle, were believed to be missing or destroyed, respectively. the postcrania were severely damaged during a fire after the museum was bombed in february 1945, while the skulls were brought to the soviet union in 1945. in 1965, the skull of the neanderthal man from le moustier and the chain of the grave of combe ... | 2002 | 12529957 |
| recombination or mutation rate heterogeneity? implications for mitochondrial eve. | the study of mitochondrial dna (mtdna) has helped to demonstrate the african origin of our species and the relationship between living humans and the neanderthals. mtdna data have also been used to establish the time and route of major events in human history, such as the expansion of neolithic farmers into europe, and the settlement of the pacific and the new world. however, it is becoming apparent that mtdna evolution is more complex than previously believed. anomalous mutation patterns pertur ... | 2003 | 12547517 |
| [on the maid finland, the neandertal human and shortly on the diet of otz. time traveling with the help of a molecule]. | 2002 | 12572274 | |
| the neanderthal taxonomic position: models of intra- and inter-specific craniofacial variation. | the neanderthal taxonomic position is a matter of wide disagreement among paleoanthropologists. some workers consider this fossil human group to represent a different species, homo neanderthalensis, while others see it as a subspecies of homo sapiens. this study developed two models of morphological variation to be applied to a comparison between neanderthals and modern humans: modern human populations provided a measure of intra-specific variation, while the species and subspecies of pan provid ... | 2003 | 12604307 |
| paleoanthropology. whither the neanderthals? | 2003 | 12624250 | |
| quantitative analysis of neanderthal temporal bone morphology using three-dimensional geometric morphometrics. | the temporal bone is the location of several traits thought to differentiate neanderthals from modern humans, including some proposed neanderthal-derived traits. most of these, however, are difficult to measure and are usually described qualitatively. this study applied the techniques of geometric morphometrics to the complex morphology of the temporal bone, in order to quantify the differences observed between neanderthal and modern human anatomy. two hundred and seventy modern human crania wer ... | 2003 | 12627528 |
| radiocarbon dating the appearance of modern humans and timing of cultural innovations in europe: new results and new challenges. | new radiocarbon dates from the sites of bockstein-törle, geissenklösterle, hohle fels, hohlenstein-stadel, sirgenstein, and vogelherd in the swabian jura of southwestern germany indicate that the aurignacian of the region spans the period from ca. 40-30ka bp. if the situation at vogelherd, in which skeletal remains from modern humans underlie an entire aurignacian sequence, is viewed as representative for the region, the dates from the swabian jura support the hypothesis that populations of mode ... | 2003 | 12657520 |
| digital analysis: manual dexterity in neanderthals. | 2003 | 12660770 | |
| the bony labyrinth of neanderthals. | this paper presents a comprehensive comparative analysis of the neanderthal bony labyrinth, a structure located inside the petrous temporal bone. fifteen neanderthal specimens are compared with a holocene human sample, as well as with a small number of european middle pleistocene hominins, and early anatomically modern and european upper palaeolithic humans. compared with holocene humans the bony labyrinth of neanderthals can be characterized by an anterior semicircular canal arc which is smalle ... | 2003 | 12662940 |
| non-occlusal dental microwear variability in a sample of middle and late pleistocene human populations from europe and the near east. | non-occlusal, buccal tooth microwear variability has been studied in 68 fossil humans from europe and the near east. the microwear patterns observed suggest that a major shift in human dietary habits and food processing techniques might have taken place in the transition from the middle to the late pleistocene populations. differences in microwear density, average length, and orientation of striations indicate that middle pleistocene humans had more abrasive dietary habits than late pleistocene ... | 2003 | 12727465 |
| thyroid rhythm phenotypes and hominid evolution: a new paradigm implicates pulsatile hormone secretion in speciation and adaptation changes. | thyroid hormones (ths, t(3)/t(4)) are essential central regulators that link many biological tasks, including embryonic and post-natal growth, reproductive function, and the behavioral and physiological responses to stress. recently i proposed a novel theory to explain the role of ths in vertebrate evolution. here i review the concept and discuss its ability to explain changes over time in hominid morphology, behavior and life history. ths are produced in a distinctly pulsatile manner and appear ... | 2003 | 12727549 |
| number of ancestral human species: a molecular perspective. | despite the remarkable developments in molecular biology over the past three decades, anthropological genetics has had only limited impact on systematics in human evolution. genetics offers the opportunity to objectively test taxonomies based on morphology and may be used to supplement conventional approaches to hominid systematics. our analyses, examining chromosomes and 46 estimates of genetic distance, indicate there may have been only around 4 species on the direct line to modern humans and ... | 2003 | 12733395 |
| physical anthropology and paleoanthropology meeting. a miss for moderns and neandertals. | 2003 | 12738830 | |
| evidence for a genetic discontinuity between neandertals and 24,000-year-old anatomically modern europeans. | during the late pleistocene, early anatomically modern humans coexisted in europe with the anatomically archaic neandertals for some thousand years. under the recent variants of the multiregional model of human evolution, modern and archaic forms were different but related populations within a single evolving species, and both have contributed to the gene pool of current humans. conversely, the out-of-africa model considers the transition between neandertals and anatomically modern humans as the ... | 2003 | 12743370 |
| the shape of the neandertal femur is primarily the consequence of a hyperpolar body form. | neandertal femora are distinct from contemporaneous near-modern human femora. traditionally, these contrasts in femoral shape have been explained as the result of the elevated activity levels and limited cultural abilities of neandertals. more recently, however, researchers have realized that many of these femoral differences may be explained by the cold-adapted bodies of neandertals vs. the warm-adapted bodies of near-modern humans. this study explicitly tests this proposed link between climate ... | 2003 | 12761384 |
| the phylogenetic relationship of neandertal and modern human mitochondrial dnas based on informative nucleotide sites. | 2003 | 12765622 | |
| internal nasal floor configuration in homo with special reference to the evolution of neandertal facial form. | the presence of a steeply sloping or depressed nasal floor within the nasal cavity of neandertals is frequently mentioned as a likely specialization or autapomorphy. the depressed nasal floor has also been seen as contributing to a relatively more capacious nasal cavity in neandertals, which is tied to cold-climate respiratory adaptation and energetics. these observations have been limited largely to a relatively few intact crania, and the character states associated with this trait have not bee ... | 2003 | 12799160 |
| pleistocene homo sapiens from middle awash, ethiopia. | the origin of anatomically modern homo sapiens and the fate of neanderthals have been fundamental questions in human evolutionary studies for over a century. a key barrier to the resolution of these questions has been the lack of substantial and accurately dated african hominid fossils from between 100,000 and 300,000 years ago. here we describe fossilized hominid crania from herto, middle awash, ethiopia, that fill this gap and provide crucial evidence on the location, timing and contextual cir ... | 2003 | 12802332 |
| the mandibular angles of dry adult human mandibles from north eastern arid zone of nigeria. | to study and document the mandibular angle of nigerians from the north eastern arid zone, and investigate its role as an anthropological parameter for racial and or population groups differential diagnosis, its utilization in laryngoscopy and for successful inferior alveolar nerve anesthesia. | 2002 | 12808782 |
| neandertal faces were not long; modern human faces are short. | neandertal faces have been described as being derived with respect to their overall length or degree of anterior projection. a comparison of cranial and mandibular indicators of lower facial projection across archaic and modern homo indicates that neandertal facial lengths on average are similar to those of preceding archaic homo and principally contrast with those of recent humans. neandertal facial length is not derived. the shortness of recent human facial skeletons is the evolutionarily deri ... | 2003 | 12815095 |
| aubesier 11 is not evidence of neanderthal conspecific care. | 2003 | 12890447 | |
| increased cranial capacity in hominid evolution and preeclampsia. | one of the major trends in primate evolution generally and hominid evolution in particular, is cranio-facial contraction accompanied by an increase in cranial capacity. landmark-based morphometric methods are applied to adult skulls of great apes (gorilla, pan), australopithecines (australopithecus and paranthropus), and humans (homo eragster, erectus, neanderthalensis, and sapiens). morphological changes quantified by vector fields (procrustes methods) indicate that these skull plans are charac ... | 2003 | 12896818 |
| quantifying trabecular orientation in the pelvic cancellous bone of modern humans, chimpanzees, and the kebara 2 neanderthal. | the adaptive nature of bone lies in its ability to respond to the environment by conforming and reshaping itself constantly to accommodate life-time stresses experienced throughout daily activities. in order to keep strains within the bone as uniform and isotropic as possible, the trabecular orientation is determined by forces acting on the bone through adaptive remodeling. hence, the preserved structure of bones may contain direct information about the forces they may have undergone. some autho ... | 2003 | 12953177 |
| neanderthal and the modern type of man. | 1952 | 12985852 | |
| [remarks on deciduous teeth of homo neanderthalensis]. | 1953 | 13094846 | |
| [some structural traits of a young neanderthal and their phyletic significance]. | 1955 | 13277209 | |
| neanderthal man and the dawn of human paleontology. | 1957 | 13506024 | |
| the evolutionary significance of variation and varieties of neanderthal man. | 1957 | 13506025 | |
| pathology and the posture of neanderthal man. | 1957 | 13506026 | |
| [x-ray studies on the frontal sinuses and mastoid processes in the classical neanderthal man in the central european area]. | 1960 | 13756054 | |
| [outlines of the history of mankind. i. the classic neanderthal man]. | 1964 | 14096892 | |
| [the nature of the history of the human race. ii. the progressive neanderthals or pre-neanderthals]. | 1964 | 14104523 | |
| [roentgenologic studies on frontal sinuses and mastoids in the neanderthal man in the central european region. ii]. | 1963 | 14108945 | |
| [how do we evaluate the neanderthal man today?]. | 1964 | 14170697 | |
| [apropos of the neanderthal automobilist]. | 1965 | 14257176 | |
| the teeth of the neanderthal child from gibralter: a re-evaluation. | 1965 | 14326954 | |
| [posture of neanderthal in vertical position]. | 1955 | 14364871 | |
| [neanderthal man: race or species?]. | 1959 | 14421422 | |
| an early modern human from the peştera cu oase, romania. | the 2002 discovery of a robust modern human mandible in the peştera cu oase, southwestern romania, provides evidence of early modern humans in the lower danubian corridor. directly accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon (14c)-dated to 34,000-36,000 14c years b.p., the oase 1 mandible is the oldest definite early modern human specimen in europe and provides perspectives on the emergence and evolution of early modern humans in the northwestern old world. the moderately long oase 1 mandible exhi ... | 2003 | 14504393 |
| rapid morphological change in living humans: implications for modern human origins. | human body size and body proportions are interpreted as markers of ethnicity, 'race,' adaptation to temperature, nutritional history and socioeconomic status. some studies emphasize only one of these indicators and other studies consider combinations of indicators. to better understand the biocultural nature of human size and proportions a new study of the growth of maya-american youngsters was undertaken in 1999 and 2000. one purpose of this research is to assess changes in body proportion betw ... | 2003 | 14527631 |
| modern human origins and prehistoric demography of europe in light of the present-day genetic diversity. | dynamic advance in dna sequencing methods and progress in formal population genetics analyses made it possible to infer aspects of human evolution from the dna diversity distribution and frequency in contemporary populations. while providing some general background concerning the origins of modern human, this paper focuses on the dynamics of prehistoric population in europe. the relevance of the present-day genetic diversity studies in elucidating prehistoric events is presented in the context o ... | 2001 | 14564026 |
| the thermal history of human fossils and the likelihood of successful dna amplification. | recent success in the amplification of ancient dna (adna) from fossil humans has led to calls for further tests to be carried out on similar material. however, there has been little systematic research on the survival of dna in the fossil record, even though the environment of the fossil is known to be of paramount importance for the survival of biomolecules over archaeological and geological timescales. a better understanding of adna survival would enable research to focus on material with grea ... | 2003 | 14580590 |
| from mouth to hand: gesture, speech, and the evolution of right-handedness. | the strong predominance of right-handedness appears to be a uniquely human characteristic, whereas the left-cerebral dominance for vocalization occurs in many species, including frogs, birds, and mammals. right-handedness may have arisen because of an association between manual gestures and vocalization in the evolution of language. i argue that language evolved from manual gestures, gradually incorporating vocal elements. the transition may be traced through changes in the function of broca's a ... | 2003 | 14621511 |
| reassessment of tl age estimates of burnt flints from the paleolithic site of tabun cave, israel. | the stratigraphy of tabun cave (mt. carmel), which comprises one of the longest sequences of lower and middle paleolithic of the near east, is widely used as a reference in debates on the evolution of paleolithic industries and on the origin of modern humans and their relationship to the neandertals. considering the methodological improvements during the last ten years, the thermoluminescence (tl) dates of heated flints frequently quoted in the literature require an update. new tl results are di ... | 2003 | 14624750 |
| first neanderthal remains from greece: the evidence from lakonis. | 2003 | 14643674 | |
| encephalization and allometric trajectories in the genus homo: evidence from the neandertal and modern lineages. | the term "encephalization" is commonly used to describe an enlargement in brain size, considered as either absolute endocranial volumes or relative values in relation to body size. it is widely recognized that a considerable endocranial expansion occurred throughout the evolution of the genus homo. this article aims to evaluate whether this phenomenon was the outcome of distinct evolutionary lineages, reaching similar brain expansions but through different trajectories. endocranial morphology wa ... | 2003 | 14673084 |
| new discoveries and interpretations of hominid fossils and artifacts from vindija cave, croatia. | beginning with excavations during the 1970s, vindija cave (croatia) has yielded significant middle and upper paleolithic fossil and archaeological finds. we report on seven recently identified hominid fossils, a newly associated partial hominid cranial vault from level g(3), nine possible bone retouchers, and a revised interpretation of the mousterian artifact assemblage from the site. this new information reinforces our knowledge of the complex biocultural phenomena revealed in unit g and earli ... | 2004 | 14698684 |
| neanderthal taxonomy reconsidered: implications of 3d primate models of intra- and interspecific differences. | the taxonomic status of neanderthals lies at the center of the modern human origins debate. proponents of the single-origin model often view this group as a distinct species with little or no contribution to the evolution of modern humans. adherents to the regional continuity model consider neanderthals a subspecies or population of homo sapiens, which contributed significantly to the evolution of early modern europeans. paleontologists generally agree that fossil species should be equivalent to ... | 2004 | 14745010 |
| healed tooth fractures in a krapina neanderthal. | 1951 | 14885432 | |
| the place of neanderthal man in human evolution. | 1951 | 14903065 | |
| the ysterfontein 1 middle stone age site, south africa, and early human exploitation of coastal resources. | human fossils and the genetics of extant human populations indicate that living people derive primarily from an african population that lived within the last 200,000 years. yet it was only approximately 50,000 years ago that the descendants of this population spread to eurasia, where they swamped or replaced the neanderthals and other nonmodern eurasians. based on archaeological observations, the most plausible hypothesis for the delay is that africans and eurasians were behaviorally similar unt ... | 2004 | 15007171 |
| spiking of contemporary human template dna with ancient dna extracts induces mutations under pcr and generates nonauthentic mitochondrial sequences. | proof of authenticity is the greatest challenge in palaeogenetic research, and many safeguards have become standard routine in laboratories specialized on ancient dna research. here we describe an as-yet unknown source of artifacts that will require special attention in the future. we show that ancient dna extracts on their own can have an inhibitory and mutagenic effect under pcr. we have spiked pcr reactions including known human test dna with 14 selected ancient dna extracts from human and no ... | 2004 | 15014140 |
| no evidence of neandertal mtdna contribution to early modern humans. | the retrieval of mitochondrial dna (mtdna) sequences from four neandertal fossils from germany, russia, and croatia has demonstrated that these individuals carried closely related mtdnas that are not found among current humans. however, these results do not definitively resolve the question of a possible neandertal contribution to the gene pool of modern humans since such a contribution might have been erased by genetic drift or by the continuous influx of modern human dna into the neandertal ge ... | 2004 | 15024415 |
| can fat explain the human brain's big bang evolution?-horrobin's leads for comparative and functional genomics. | when david horrobin suggested that phospholipid and fatty acid metabolism played a major role in human evolution, his 'fat utilization hypothesis' unified intriguing work from paleoanthropology, evolutionary biology, genetic and nervous system research in a novel and coherent lipid-related context. interestingly, unlike most other evolutionary concepts, the hypothesis allows specific predictions which can be empirically tested in the near future. this paper summarizes some of horrobin's intrigui ... | 2004 | 15041025 |
| the expert neandertal mind. | cognitive neuropsychology, cognitive anthropology, and cognitive archaeology are combined to yield a picture of neandertal cognition in which expert performance via long-term working memory is the centerpiece of problem solving. this component of neandertal cognition appears to have been modern in scope. however, neandertals' working memory capacity, which is the ability to hold a variety of information in active attention, may not have been as large as that of modern humans. this characteristic ... | 2004 | 15066380 |
| eyasi 1 and the suprainiac fossa. | a reexamination of eyasi 1, a later middle pleistocene east african neurocranium, reveals the presence of a suite of midoccipital features, including a modest nuchal torus that is limited to the middle half of the bone, the absence of an external occipital protuberance, and a distinct transversely oval suprainiac fossa. these features, and especially the suprainiac fossa, were considered to be uniquely derived for the european and western asian neandertals. these observations therefore indicate ... | 2004 | 15085545 |
| climate change and evolving human diversity in europe during the last glacial. | a link between climate change and human evolution during the pleistocene has often been assumed but rarely tested. at the macro-evolutionary level foley showed for hominids that extinction, rather than speciation, correlates with environmental change as recorded in the deep sea record. our aim is to examine this finding at a smaller scale and with high-resolution environmental and archaeological archives. our interest is in changing patterns of human dispersal under shifting pleistocene climates ... | 2004 | 15101580 |
| palaeoanthropology: neanderthal teeth lined up. | 2004 | 15118713 | |
| surprisingly rapid growth in neanderthals. | life-history traits correlate closely with dental growth, 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. dental growth can be determined from the speed of enamel formation (or extension rate). we analysed the enamel extension rate in homo antecessor (8 teeth analysed), homo heidelbergensis (106), homo neanderthalensis ('neanderthals'; 146) and upper palaeolith ... | 2004 | 15118725 |
| geometric morphometric analysis of allometric variation in the mandibular morphology of the hominids of atapuerca, sima de los huesos site. | allometry is an important factor of morphological integration that contributes to the organization of the phenotype and its variation. variation in the allometric shape of the mandible is particularly important in hominid evolution because the mandible carries important taxonomic traits. some of these traits are known to covary with size, particularly the retromolar space, symphyseal curvature, and position of the mental foramen. the mandible is a well studied system in the context of the evolut ... | 2004 | 15164343 |
| ancient dna: would the real neandertal please stand up? | mitochondrial dna sequences recovered from eight neandertal specimens cannot be detected in either early fossil europeans or in modern populations. this indicates that, if neandertals made any genetic contribution at all to modern humans, it must have been limited, though the extent of the contribution cannot be resolved at present. | 2004 | 15182692 |
| hominins do not share a common postnatal facial ontogenetic shape trajectory. | this paper examines the hypothesis raised by recent studies that postnatal trajectories of shape change in the facial skeleton are parallel between, at least, chimpanzees, modern humans and also fossil hominins, specifically australopithecines and possibly neanderthals. in contrast, other studies point to divergences in postnatal shape trajectories within diverse groups of primates. as such there is some debate regarding the relative contributions of pre and postnatal ontogeny to adult morpholog ... | 2004 | 15211688 |
| kinematics of cranial ontogeny: heterotopy, heterochrony, and geometric morphometric analysis of growth models. | in this paper, we examine the relationship between the classical concepts of heterotopy, heterochrony and ontogenetic allometry as descriptive and as explanatory categories in the investigation of evolutionary developmental novelty in the hominid skull. we use concepts of kinematic analysis of locomotion to propose a methodological framework for the kinematic analysis of cranial form change during ontogeny. we argue that a combination of geometric-morphometric methods with graphics visualization ... | 2004 | 15211689 |
| [arthur keith and the first settlement of human being in malta. two subversive teeth]. | the paper aims to give historical example of errors to which the examination of two fragmentary - and probably pathological - fossil remains can lead in the field of human palaeontology. in 1917, two very special human molars with a wide extension of their pulp cavity and fused fang were found in neolothic excavations in malta. as he had observed such a dental morphology of neanderthal man in jersey arthur keith (1866-1955) called that taurodontism and claimed it was a characteristic between mal ... | 2004 | 15211991 |
| unexpectedly recent dates for human remains from vogelherd. | the human skeletal remains from the vogelherd cave in the swabian jura of southwestern germany are at present seen as the best evidence that modern humans produced the artefacts of the early aurignacian. radiocarbon measurements from all the key fossils from vogelherd show that these human remains actually date to the late neolithic, between 3,900 and 5,000 radiocarbon years before present (bp). although many questions remain unresolved, these results weaken the arguments for the danube corridor ... | 2004 | 15241412 |
| [similarity of mutation spectra of the mitochondrial dna hypervariable segment 1 in homo and pan species]. | the mutation spectrum of mtdna hypervariable segment 1 (hvs1) was compared for east chimpanzee pan troglodytes schweigfurthi and human. the two hvs1 had much the same nucleotide composition, and their mutation spectra were similar in major characteristics (substantial prevalence of transitions over transversions, pyrimidine transitions over purine ones, and c --> t over t --> c). dna strand displacement (dislocation) during replication was identified as a major mechanism of context-dependent mut ... | 2004 | 15285613 |
| prevalence and the duration of linear enamel hypoplasia: a comparative study of neandertals and inuit foragers. | as a dental indicator of generalized physiological stress, enamel hypoplasia has been the subject of several neandertal studies. while previous studies generally have found high frequencies of enamel hypoplasia in neandertals, the significance of this finding varies with frequencies of enamel hypoplasia in comparative samples. the present investigation was undertaken to ascertain if the enamel hypoplasia evidence in neandertals suggests a high level of physiological stress relative to a modern h ... | 2004 | 15288524 |
| the effect of lower limb length on the energetic cost of locomotion: implications for fossil hominins. | the consequences of the relatively short lower limbs characteristic of al 288-1 have been widely discussed, as have the causes and consequences of the short limbs of neanderthals. previous studies of the effect of limb length on the energetic cost of locomotion have reported no relationship; however, limb length could have accounted for as much as 19% of the variation in cost and gone undetected (steudel and beattie, 1995; steudel, 1994, 1996). kramer (1999) and kramer and eck (2000) have recent ... | 2004 | 15288526 |
| lack of phylogeography in european mammals before the last glaciation. | in many extant animal and plant species in europe and north america a correlation exists between the geographical location of individuals and the genetic relatedness of the mitochondrial (mt) dna sequences that they carry. here, we analyze mtdna sequences from cave bears, brown bears, cave hyenas, and neandertals in europe before the last glacial maximum and fail to detect any phylogeographic patterns similar to those observed in extant species. we suggest that at the beginning of the last glaci ... | 2004 | 15317936 |
| a morphometric analysis of maxillary molar crowns of middle-late pleistocene hominins. | this study explores the significance of shape differences in the maxillary first molar crowns of neandertals and anatomically modern humans. it uses morphometric analysis to quantify these differences and to investigate how the orientation of major cusps, relative cusp base areas and occlusal polygon area influence crown shape. the aims of this study were to 1) quantify these data to test whether the tooth shapes of neandertals and anatomically modern humans differ significantly and 2) to explor ... | 2004 | 15337415 |
| diagnostic differences in mandibular p4 shape between neandertals and anatomically modern humans. | this study uses elliptical fourier analysis to quantify shape differences observed in the p(4) crown of neandertals and anatomically modern humans. previously, p(4) shape was assessed qualitatively, and results suggested marked differences between neandertals and anatomically modern humans (bailey [2002] new anat. 269:148-156). the goal of this study was to investigate the p(4) shape in more detail, quantifying it in order to determine its utility for taxonomic classification and phylogenetic an ... | 2005 | 15386225 |
| cranial injuries in prehistoric man, with particular references to the neanderthals. | 1950 | 15411558 | |
| ontogenetic migration of the mental foramen in neandertals and modern humans. | since the nineteenth century, researchers have noted that neandertal and modern human adults differ in mental foramen position, although the ontogenetic changes in the position of this feature have only recently come under the scrutiny of paleoanthropologists. research on mental foramen position has focused on whether this feature is inferior to a particular tooth. however, tooth position may not be a reliable indicator of mental foramen position because of variability in tooth size within and b ... | 2004 | 15454333 |
| influences of limb proportions and body size on locomotor kinematics in terrestrial primates and fossil hominins. | during locomotion, mammalian limb postures are influenced by many factors including the animal's limb length and body mass. polk (2002) compared the gait of similar-sized cercopithecine monkeys that differed limb proportions and found that longer-limbed monkeys usually adopt more extended joint postures than shorter-limbed monkeys in order to moderate their joint moments. studies of primates as well as non-primate mammals that vary in body mass have demonstrated that larger animals use more exte ... | 2004 | 15454335 |
| paleoanthropology. dressed for success: neandertal culture wins respect. | 2004 | 15459361 | |
| geometric morphometrics and paleoneurology: brain shape evolution in the genus homo. | paleoneurology concerns the study and analysis of fossil endocasts. together with cranial capacity and discrete anatomical features, shape can be analysed to consider the spatial relationships between structures and to investigate the endocranial structural system. a sample of endocasts from fossil specimens of the genus homo has been analysed using traditional metrics and 2d geometric morphometrics based on lateral projections of endocranial shape. the maximum and frontal widths show a size-rel ... | 2004 | 15530349 |
| adolescent archaics or adult moderns? le moustier 1 as a model for estimating the age at death of fragmentary supraorbital fossils in the modern human origins debate. | this study documents and examines selected implications of the adolescent supraorbital anatomy of the le moustier 1 neandertal. le moustier's supraorbital morphology conforms to that expected of an adolescent neandertal but indicates that significant development of the adult neandertal torus occurs late in ontogeny. as the best preserved adolescent from the late pleistocene, le moustier 1's anatomy is used to help distinguish adolescent from adult anatomy in two cases of fragmentary supraorbital ... | 2004 | 15553265 |