Literature DB >> 20834053

Right handed Neandertals: Vindija and beyond.

David W Frayer1, Ivana Fiore, Carles Lalueza-Fox, Jakov Radovcić, Luca Bondioli.   

Abstract

Seven Vindija (Croatia) Neandertal teeth, dated about 32,000 years ago, were analyzed to determine patterning of scratches on the anterior teeth. Oblique scratches exclusively on the labial faces of incisors and canines represent a distinctive pattern, characteristic of hand directed, non-masticatory activities. At Vindija and elsewhere these scratches reveal activities, which were performed primarily with the right hand. The late Neandertals from Vindija, combined with other studies, show that European Neandertals were predominately right-handed with a ratio 15:2 (88.2%), a frequency similar to living people. Studies of teeth from Atapuerca extend this modern ratio to more than 500,000 years ago and increase the frequency of right- handers in the European fossil record to almost 94%. Species-wide, preferential right-handedness is a defining feature of modern Homo sapiens, tied to brain laterality and language with the 9:1 ratio of right- to left- handers - a reflection of the link between left hemispheric dominance and language. Up-to-date behavioral and anatomical studies of Neandertal fossils and the recent discovery of their possession of the FOXP2 gene indicate Neandertals (and, very likely, their European ancestors) had linguistic capacities similar to living humans.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20834053

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anthropol Sci        ISSN: 1827-4765


  12 in total

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3.  Hand to mouth in a neandertal: right-handedness in Regourdou 1.

Authors:  Virginie Volpato; Roberto Macchiarelli; Debbie Guatelli-Steinberg; Ivana Fiore; Luca Bondioli; David W Frayer
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4.  The archaeological record speaks: bridging anthropology and linguistics.

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Review 5.  A Proposed Neurological Interpretation of Language Evolution.

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7.  Globularity and language-readiness: generating new predictions by expanding the set of genes of interest.

Authors:  Cedric Boeckx; Antonio Benítez-Burraco
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8.  Handedness in Neandertals from the El Sidrón (Asturias, Spain): evidence from instrumental striations with ontogenetic inferences.

Authors:  Almudena Estalrrich; Antonio Rosas
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9.  Toothpicking and periodontal disease in a Neanderthal specimen from Cova Foradà site (Valencia, Spain).

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10.  The protocadherin 11X/Y (PCDH11X/Y) gene pair as determinant of cerebral asymmetry in modern Homo sapiens.

Authors:  Thomas H Priddle; Timothy J Crow
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