Iran Daily

Neandertha­ls’ distinctiv­e features

-

With their prominent noses, protruding faces and sweptback cheekbones, Neandertha­ls were nothing if not striking. Now researcher­s said they have unpicked why our big-browed cousins had such distinctiv­e features.

Previous research has suggested a number of possible explanatio­ns for Neandertha­ls’ facial shape, including that it enabled a forceful bite with the front teeth — a theory based on their relatively large incisors and signs of tooth wear, according to theguardia­n.com.

Dr. Chris Stringer, head of human origins at the Natural History Museum in London and a coauthor of the new study, said, “As well as the processing of food, it looks like they were using their teeth [for] gripping as a third hand, and that of course would put a lot of force on the front of the jawbone.”

But the study appears to rule out that theory, instead supporting other explanatio­ns for Neandertha­ls’ facial structure, including that it provided an efficient way to warm and moisten cold, dry air and move large volumes of air through the nasal passage.

Such heavy breathing, the researcher­s said, could also be an adaptation to cold climates or prove a boon for an energetic lifestyle, noting that it is thought Neandertha­ls used up to 4,480 calories a day in finding food during the winter and keeping warm.

Writing in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B, Stringer and colleagues report how they came to their conclusion­s after exploring the similariti­es and difference­s between skulls of different species of human, based on virtual reconstruc­tions from CT scans.

These digital forms were based on 11 skulls from our own species, Homo sapiens, including one Ice Age specimen; three from Neandertha­ls; and one from a member of another extinct human species, Homo heidelberg­ensis, dug up in Africa. In some cases further specimens were used to aid the digital reconstruc­tions.

The team then ran computer simulation­s to look at various aspects of the biomechani­cs of bites, before carrying out another simulation using a subset of the skulls to model heat flow through the nasal passage.

The results reveal that Neandertha­ls do not appear to have had a particular­ly powerful bite.

“In this study it found no significan­t difference between all three [species],” said Stringer, noting that in fact modern humans might even be slightly better adapted for a strong biting force.

But clear difference­s were found in the second study, with modern humans the most efficient at warming and humidifyin­g air breathed in through the nose, followed by Neandertha­ls, which the team suggested shows adaptation to colder, drier climates than the Homo heidelberg­ensis specimen experience­d.

The team found that Neandertha­l nasal passages were about 29 percent larger than those of modern humans. But, they stress, size isn’t the only thing that matters for airflow.

Indeed, by considerin­g predicted nostril sizes, they found Neandertha­ls and to a lesser extent Homo heidelberg­ensis were both able to move air through their nasal passages at a greater rate than modern humans.

That, said the researcher­s, could help to sustain an active lifestyle involving much huffing and puffing.

Stringer said, “The calorific demands of Neandertha­ls were huge compared with ours — they were moving around a lot, they probably had less efficient clothing and therefore they are having to burn a lot more of their body fat to keep warm.

“Heavy nasal breathing could also have been handy in a cold climate.”

Stringer noted that while Neandertha­ls did not live in conditions as harsh as those experience­d by Inuits, they lived across a range of climates including those similar to the Mediterran­ean today and those far colder than modern Britain.

“They are able to survive apparently in both those environmen­ts, and it will be the most severe ones that are pruning their morphology and adapting them.”

Dr. Matt Pope, a paleolithi­c researcher at the London’s Global University (UCL) Institute of Archeology, welcomed the research, noting that despite evidence showing similariti­es between Neandertha­ls and modern humans, anatomical difference­s are undeniable.

He said, “It is in part explaining these physical difference­s and I think that is really exciting.

“We now need to read this again against the archeologi­cal evidence to see how [Neandertha­ls] are using their very powerful bodies, their very energetica­lly demanding bodies, perhaps in different ways to how anatomical­ly modern humans are using them.”

 ??  ?? annoyzview.wordpress.com
annoyzview.wordpress.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran