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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Climate signatures in the morphological differentiation of worldwide modern human populations.

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TLDR
The Fst analysis suggest that selection to climate is largely restricted to groups living in extremely cold environments, including Northeast Asia, North America, and Northern Europe, though each of these regions appears to have arrived at their morphology through distinct adaptive pathways.
Abstract
The ability of cranial morphology to reflect population/phylogenetic history, and the degree to which it might be influenced by environmental factors and selection pressures have been widely discussed. Recent consensus views cranial morphology as largely indicative of population history in humans, with some anatomical cranial regions/measurements being more informative on population history, while others being under selection pressure. We test earlier findings using the largest and most diverse cranial dataset available as yet: 7,423 male specimens from 135 geographic human population samples represented by 33 standard craniometric linear measurements. We calculated Mahalanobis D2 for three datasets: complete cranial dataset; facial measurement dataset; and neurocranial measurement dataset; these morphological distance matrices were then compared to matrices of geographic distances as well as of several climatic variables. Additionally, we calculated Fst values for our cranial measurements and compared the results to the expected Fst values for neutral genetic loci. Our findings support the hypothesis that cranial, and especially neurocranial morphology, is phylogenetically informative, and that aspects of the face and cranium are subject to selection related to climatic factors. The Fst analysis suggest that selection to climate is largely restricted to groups living in extremely cold environments, including Northeast Asia, North America, and Northern Europe, though each of these regions appears to have arrived at their morphology through distinct adaptive pathways. Anat Rec, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic evidence for the Pleistocene and recent population history of Native Americans

Maanasa Raghavan, +121 more
- 21 Aug 2015 - 
TL;DR: The results suggest that there has been gene flow between some Native Americans from both North and South America and groups related to East Asians and Australo-Melanesians, the latter possibly through an East Asian route that might have included ancestors of modern Aleutian Islanders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate-related variation of the human nasal cavity.

TL;DR: The observed climate-related shape changes are functionally consistent with an increase in contact between air and mucosal tissue in cold-dry climates through greater turbulence during inspiration and a higher surface-to-volume ratio in the upper nasal cavity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global human mandibular variation reflects differences in agricultural and hunter-gatherer subsistence strategies

TL;DR: The results support notions that a decrease in masticatory stress among agriculturalists causes the mandible to grow and develop differently, which explains why there is often a mismatch between the size of the lower face and the dentition, which leads to increased prevalence of dental crowding and malocclusions in modern postindustrial populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Later Stone Age Calvaria from Iwo Eleru, Nigeria: morphology and chronology

TL;DR: The results support a terminal Pleistocene chronology for the Iwo Eleru burial and further highlight the dearth of hominin finds from West Africa, and underscore the real lack of knowledge of human evolution in that region.
References
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Journal Article

The Detection of Disease Clustering and a Generalized Regression Approach

Nathan Mantel
- 01 Feb 1967 - 
TL;DR: The technic to be given below for imparting statistical validity to the procedures already in vogue can be viewed as a generalized form of regression with possible useful application to problems arising in quite different contexts.
Book ChapterDOI

The Apportionment of Human Diversity

TL;DR: Lewontin this article pointed out that even in the present era of Darwinism there is considerable diversity of opinion about the amount or importance of intragroup variation as opposed to the variation between races and species.
Book

Lehrbuch der Anthropologie

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