Affiliation:
1. Department of Anatomy, College of Graduate Studies, Midwestern University, Glendale, AZ 85308, USA
Abstract
Homo erectus
is the first hominin species with a truly cosmopolitan distribution and resembles recent humans in its broad spatial distribution. The microevolutionary events associated with dispersal and local adaptation may have produced similar population structure in both species. Understanding the evolutionary population dynamics of
H. erectus
has larger implications for the emergence of later
Homo
lineages in the Middle Pleistocene. Quantitative genetics models provide a means of interrogating aspects of long-standing
H. erectus
population history narratives. For the current study, cranial fossils were sorted into six major palaeodemes from sites across Africa and Asia spanning 1.8–0.1 Ma. Three-dimensional shape data from the occipital and frontal bones were used to compare intraspecific variation and test evolutionary hypotheses. Results indicate that
H. erectus
had higher individual and group variation than
Homo sapiens
, probably reflecting different levels of genetic diversity and population history in these spatially disperse species. This study also revealed distinct evolutionary histories for frontal and occipital bone shape in
H. erectus
, with a larger role for natural selection in the former. One scenario consistent with these findings is climate-driven facial adaptation in
H. erectus
, which is reflected in the frontal bone through integration with the orbits.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
4 articles.
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