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Variation in Human Body Size and Shape

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Variation in Human Body Size and Shape
Author(s)Ruff, Christopher
AbstractEvolutionary trends in human body form provide important context for interpreting variation among modern populations. Average body mass in living humans is smaller than it was during most of the Pleistocene, possibly owing to technological improvements during the past 50,000 years that no longer favored large body size. Sexual dimorphism in body size reached modern levels at least 150,000 years ago and probably earlier. Geographic variation in both body size and shape in earlier humans paralleled latitudinal clines observed today. Climatic adaptation is the most likely primary cause for these gradients, overlain in more recent populations by nutritional effects on growth. Thus, to distinguish growth disturbances, it is necessary to partition out the (presumably genetic) long-term differences in body form between populations that have resulted from climatic selection. An example is given from a study of Inupiat children, using a new index of body shape to assess relative body mass.
IssueNo
Pages211-232
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAnnual Review of Anthropology
VolumeNo31
PubDate2002
ISBN_ISSN
Browse Path(s)Anthropology
—-Biological/Physical Anthropology
——–Biology, Eugenics, and Racism

Biological/Physical Anthropology

  • Biology, Eugenics, and Racism
  • Creationism and Science
  • Human Adaptation
  • Human Biology, Genetic Diversity and Human Physical Variety
  • Human Evolution/Anthropogenesis Evolutionary Theory
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  • Paleoanthropology
  • Primatology


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