Modern human cranial diversity in the Late Pleistocene of Africa and Eurasia: evidence from Nazlet Khater, Peştera cu Oase, and Hofmeyr.

IF 2.6 2区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American journal of physical anthropology Pub Date : 2009-10-01 DOI:10.1002/ajpa.21080
Isabelle Crevecoeur, Hélène Rougier, Frederick Grine, Alain Froment
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引用次数: 51

Abstract

The origin and evolutionary history of modern humans is of considerable interest to paleoanthropologists and geneticists alike. Paleontological evidence suggests that recent humans originated and expanded from an African lineage that may have undergone demographic crises in the Late Pleistocene according to archaeological and genetic data. This would suggest that extant human populations derive from, and perhaps sample a restricted part of the genetic and morphological variation that was present in the Late Pleistocene. Crania that date to Marine Isotope Stage 3 should yield information pertaining to the level of Late Pleistocene human phenotypic diversity and its evolution in modern humans. The Nazlet Khater (NK) and Hofmeyr (HOF) crania from Egypt and South Africa, together with penecontemporaneous specimens from the Peştera cu Oase in Romania, permit preliminary assessment of variation among modern humans from geographically disparate regions at this time. Morphometric and morphological comparisons with other Late Pleistocene modern human specimens, and with 23 recent human population samples, reveal that elevated levels of variation are present throughout the Late Pleistocene. Comparison of Holocene and Late Pleistocene craniometric variation through resampling analyses supports hypotheses derived from genetic data suggesting that present phenotypic variation may represent only a restricted part of Late Pleistocene human diversity. The Nazlet Khater, Hofmeyr, and Oase specimens provide a unique glimpse of that diversity.

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非洲和欧亚大陆更新世晚期的现代人类头骨多样性:来自Nazlet Khater、Peştera cu Oase和Hofmeyr的证据。
古人类学家和遗传学家对现代人的起源和进化历史都很感兴趣。根据考古和遗传数据,古生物学证据表明,最近的人类起源于并扩展自一个可能在晚更新世经历人口危机的非洲血统。这将表明,现存的人类种群源于,或者可能是样本中存在于晚更新世的遗传和形态变异的有限部分。可追溯到海洋同位素阶段3的颅骨应该提供有关晚更新世人类表型多样性水平及其在现代人类中的进化的信息。来自埃及和南非的Nazlet Khater (NK)和Hofmeyr (HOF)颅骨,以及来自罗马尼亚petera cu Oase的准同时期标本,可以初步评估当时来自不同地理区域的现代人之间的差异。与其他晚更新世现代人类标本以及23个最近的人类种群样本的形态测量和形态学比较显示,在整个晚更新世,变异水平都有所提高。通过重新采样分析对全新世和晚更新世颅骨测量差异的比较支持了遗传数据的假设,即目前的表型变异可能仅代表晚更新世人类多样性的有限部分。Nazlet Khater, Hofmeyr和Oase的标本为这种多样性提供了独特的一瞥。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Physical Anthropology (AJPA) is the official journal of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists. The Journal is published monthly in three quarterly volumes. In addition, two supplements appear on an annual basis, the Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, which publishes major review articles, and the Annual Meeting Issue, containing the Scientific Program of the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists and abstracts of posters and podium presentations. The Yearbook of Physical Anthropology has its own editor, appointed by the Association, and is handled independently of the AJPA. As measured by impact factor, the AJPA is among the top journals listed in the anthropology category by the Social Science Citation Index. The reputation of the AJPA as the leading publication in physical anthropology is built on its century-long record of publishing high quality scientific articles in a wide range of topics.
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