放射光が人類の幼年期の進化に新たな光を当てる(Synchrotron radiation sheds new light on the evolution of human childhood)

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2024-11-15 韓国基礎科学研究院(IBS)

この研究は、シンクロトロン放射を使って人類の成長や発達に関する新しい知見を得ることに成功したことを報告しています。具体的には、現代と古代の歯のエナメル質の分析を通じて、古代の子供の成長過程がどのように進化してきたかが明らかにされました。この研究により、進化の過程での人類の発達速度の変化や、ライフサイクルにおける幼少期の役割について新たな理解が深まりました。

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ドマニシで発見された初期ホモの成長を示す歯の証拠 Dental evidence for extended growth in early Homo from Dmanisi

Christoph P. E. Zollikofer,Vincent Beyrand,David Lordkipanidze,Paul Tafforeau & Marcia S. Ponce de León
Nature  Published:13 November 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08205-2

放射光が人類の幼年期の進化に新たな光を当てる(Synchrotron radiation sheds new light on the evolution of human childhood)

Abstract

Human life history is characterized by an extended period of immaturity during which there is a disjunction between cerebral and somatic growth rates1. This mode of ontogeny is thought to be essential for the acquisition of advanced cognitive capabilities in a socially complex environment while the brain is still growing2. Key information about when and how this pattern evolved can be gleaned from the teeth of fossil hominins because dental development informs about the pace of life history3,4,5. Here we show that the first evolutionary steps towards an extended growth phase occurred in the genus Homo at least 1.77 million years ago, before any substantial increase in brain size. We used synchrotron phase-contrast tomography6 to track the microstructural development of the dentition of a subadult early Homo individual from Dmanisi, Georgia. The individual died at the age of 11.4 ± 0.6 years, shortly before reaching dental maturity. Tooth growth rates were high, similar to rates in living great apes. However, the Dmanisi individual showed a human-like delayed formation of the posterior relative to the anterior dentition, and a late growth spurt of the dentition as a whole. The unique combination of great-ape-like and human-like features of dental ontogeny suggests that early Homo had evolved an extended growth phase before a general slow-down in life history, possibly related to biocultural reproduction7 rather than brain growth.

生物化学工学
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