TY - JOUR
T1 - Temporal trends and metric variation in the mandibles and dentition of Australopithecus afarensis
AU - Lockwood, Charles A.
AU - Kimbel, William
AU - Johanson, Donald
N1 - Funding Information: Funding for Hadar field work leading to the recovery and analysis of new specimens included in this paper has been provided by grants to the Institute of Human Origins (IHO) from the National Geographic Society and the National Science Foundation (BNS 9113066, SBR 9222604 and SBR 9511172). IHO provided additional funding for the collection of comparative data. Funding Information: This work was made possible by the Center for Research and Conservation of Cultural Heritage (Ethiopian Ministry of Information and Culture), which granted us permission to conduct field work at Hadar and to study the Hadar fossils. We thank the staff of the National Museum of Ethiopia for assistance during our laboratory studies in Addis Ababa. We are also grateful to Bruce Latimer and Lyman Jellema for permission to study great apes housed at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, and for their assistance while there. We thank Dawn Thiele, Hannah Pope, and Brandeis McBratney for their critical work in data entry and analysis. Yoel Rak, Carol Ward, Meave Leakey, Terry Harrison, and three anonymous reviewers provided useful comments and discussion.
PY - 2000/7
Y1 - 2000/7
N2 - The Pliocene hominin samples from Hadar and Laetoli are thought to represent one species, Australopithecus afarensis, that exhibits stasis throughout its temporal range and has high levels of skeletal sexual dimorphism. In this paper, we test the hypothesis of stasis in dental and mandibular dimensions using nonparametric rank correlation methods to detect temporal trends and randomization tests to evaluate their statistical significance. We then use two methods (CV resampling; Fligner-Killeen test) to compare overall levels of variation in the fossil sample to those of extant hominoid species. Together, these analyses allow us to gauge the effects of changes through time on variation in mandibles and teeth of A. afarensis. P3 mesiodistal length, M3 size, and canine shape change through time but do not appear unusually variable in the sample as a whole. These temporal trends possibly reflect differences between the Laetoli and Hadar site-samples. For mandibles, a pronounced trend towards greater corpus size occurs late in the temporal sequence and contributes to high levels of variation compared to African apes. These results show that significant directional changes do occur in the A. afarensis mandibles and teeth, and in these elements, at least, the species is not static. Temporal variation is clearly an important component of overall variation in the A. afarensis lineage, even though other factors, such as sexual dimorphism, may also play a part.
AB - The Pliocene hominin samples from Hadar and Laetoli are thought to represent one species, Australopithecus afarensis, that exhibits stasis throughout its temporal range and has high levels of skeletal sexual dimorphism. In this paper, we test the hypothesis of stasis in dental and mandibular dimensions using nonparametric rank correlation methods to detect temporal trends and randomization tests to evaluate their statistical significance. We then use two methods (CV resampling; Fligner-Killeen test) to compare overall levels of variation in the fossil sample to those of extant hominoid species. Together, these analyses allow us to gauge the effects of changes through time on variation in mandibles and teeth of A. afarensis. P3 mesiodistal length, M3 size, and canine shape change through time but do not appear unusually variable in the sample as a whole. These temporal trends possibly reflect differences between the Laetoli and Hadar site-samples. For mandibles, a pronounced trend towards greater corpus size occurs late in the temporal sequence and contributes to high levels of variation compared to African apes. These results show that significant directional changes do occur in the A. afarensis mandibles and teeth, and in these elements, at least, the species is not static. Temporal variation is clearly an important component of overall variation in the A. afarensis lineage, even though other factors, such as sexual dimorphism, may also play a part.
KW - Anagenesis
KW - Australopithecus
KW - Hadar
KW - Hominids
KW - Laetoli
KW - Stasis
KW - Variation
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U2 - https://doi.org/10.1006/jhev.2000.0401
DO - https://doi.org/10.1006/jhev.2000.0401
M3 - Article
C2 - 10896811
SN - 0047-2484
VL - 39
SP - 23
EP - 55
JO - Journal of human evolution
JF - Journal of human evolution
IS - 1
ER -