Frontal sinus size in South African Later Stone Age Holocene Khoe‐San

Author:

Grine Frederick E.12ORCID,Post Nicholas W.3ORCID,Greening Victoria4ORCID,Crevecoeur Isabelle56,Billings Brendon K.7ORCID,Meyer Anja7ORCID,Holt Sharon8,Black Wendy9ORCID,Morris Alan G.10ORCID,Veeramah Krishna R.11ORCID,Mongle Carrie S.112ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology Stony Brook University Stony Brook New York USA

2. Department of Anatomical Sciences, School of Medicine Stony Brook University New York USA

3. Richard Gilder Graduate School and Division of Anthropology American Museum of Natural History New York New York USA

4. School of Archaeology University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Laboratoire de la Préhistoire à l'Actuel: Culture, Environnement et Anthropologie Université de Bordeaux Pessac Cedex France

6. Chargée de Recherche CNRS Université de Bordeaux Pessac Cedex France

7. Human Variation and Identification Research Unit, School of Anatomical Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Parktown Johannesburg South Africa

8. Florisbad Quaternary Research Station National Museum Bloemfontein South Africa

9. Archaeology Unit, Iziko Museums of South Africa Cape Town South Africa

10. Department of Human Biology University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

11. Department of Ecology & Evolution Stony Brook University Stony Brook New York USA

12. Turkana Basin Institute Stony Brook University Stony Brook New York USA

Abstract

AbstractFrontal size variation is comparatively poorly sampled among sub‐Saharan African populations. This study assessed frontal sinus size in a sample of Khoe‐San skeletal remains from South African Later Stone Age contexts. Volumes were determined from CT scans of 102 adult crania; individual sex could be estimated in 82 cases. Sinus volume is not sexually dimorphic in this sample. The lack of frontal sinus aplasia is concordant with the low incidences recorded for other sub‐Saharan African and most other global populations save those that inhabit high latitudes. There is considerable variation in frontal sinus size among global populations, and the Khoe‐San possess among the smallest. The Khoe‐San have rather diminutive sinuses compared to sub‐Saharan Bantu‐speaking populations but resemble a northern African (Sudanese) population. Genetic studies indicate the earliest population divergence within Homo sapiens to have been between the Khoe‐San and all other living groups, and that this likely occurred in Africa during the span of Marine Isotope Stages 8–6. There is scant information on frontal sinus development among Late Quaternary African fossils that are likely either closely related or attributable to Homo sapiens. Among these, the MIS 3 cranium from Hofmeyr, South Africa, exhibits distinct Khoe‐San cranial affinities and despite its large size has a very small frontal sinus. This raises the possibility that the small frontal sinuses of the Holocene South African Khoe‐San might be a feature retained from an earlier MIS 3 population.

Publisher

Wiley

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