| Literature DB >> 34814754 |
Patrick Mahoney1, Gina McFarlane1, B Holly Smith2,3, Justyna J Miszkiewicz4,5, Paola Cerrito6,7, Helen Liversidge8, Lucia Mancini9, Diego Dreossi9, Alessio Veneziano9,10, Federico Bernardini11,12, Emanuela Cristiani13, Alison Behie4, Alfredo Coppa14,15,16, Luca Bondioli17,18,19, David W Frayer20, Davorka Radovčić21, Alessia Nava1,13.
Abstract
Modern humans have a slow and extended period of childhood growth, but to what extent this ontogenetic pathway was present in Neanderthals is debated. Dental development, linked to the duration of somatic growth across modern primates, is the main source for information about growth and development in a variety of fossil primates, including humans. Studies of Neanderthal permanent teeth report a pace of development either similar to recent humans or relatively accelerated. Neanderthal milk teeth, which form and emerge before permanent teeth, provide an opportunity to determine which pattern was present at birth. Here we present a comparative study of the prenatal and early postnatal growth of five milk teeth from three Neanderthals (120 000-130 000 years ago) using virtual histology. Results reveal regions of their milk teeth formed quickly before birth and over a relatively short period of time after birth. Tooth emergence commenced towards the earliest end of the eruption schedules displayed by extant human children. Advanced dental development is consistent with expectations for Neanderthal infant feeding.Entities:
Keywords: dental development; evolutionary biology; fossil hominins; human evolution; virtual histology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34814754 PMCID: PMC8611323 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.2079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349