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Viewpoints: Diet and dietary adaptations in early hominins: The hard food perspective
Authors:David S Strait  Paul Constantino  Peter W Lucas  Brian G Richmond  Mark A Spencer  Paul C Dechow  Callum F Ross  Ian R Grosse  Barth W Wright  Bernard A Wood  Gerhard W Weber  Qian Wang  Craig Byron  Dennis E Slice  Janine Chalk  Amanda L Smith  Leslie C Smith  Sarah Wood  Michael Berthaume  Stefano Benazzi  Christine Dzialo  Kelli Tamvada  Justin A Ledogar
Institution:1. Department of Anthropology, University at Albany, , Albany, NY, 12222;2. Department of Biological Sciences, Marshall University, , Huntington, WV, 25755;3. Department of Bioclinical Sciences, Faculty of Dentistry, Kuwait University, , Kuwait;4. Department of Anthropology, Center for the Advanced Study of Hominid Paleobiology, The George Washington University, , Washington, DC, 20052;5. Human Origins Program, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, , Washington, DC, 20560;6. School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Institute of Human Origins, Arizona State University, , Tempe, AZ, 85287‐4104;7. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M Health Science Center, Baylor College of Dentistry, , Dallas, TX, 75246;8. Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, , Chicago, IL, 60637;9. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Massachusetts, , Amherst, MA, 01003‐2210;10. Department of Anatomy, Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences, , Kansas City, MO, 64106‐1453;11. Department of Anthropology, University of Vienna, , A‐1090 Vienna, Austria;12. Division of Basic Medical Sciences, Mercer University School of Medicine, , Macon, GA, 31207;13. Department of Biology, Mercer University, , Macon, GA, 31207;14. School of Computational Science and Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, , Tallahassee, FL, 32306‐4120;15. Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, , Durham, NC, 27708‐0383;16. Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, , 04103 Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:Recent biomechanical analyses examining the feeding adaptations of early hominins have yielded results consistent with the hypothesis that hard foods exerted a selection pressure that influenced the evolution of australopith morphology. However, this hypothesis appears inconsistent with recent reconstructions of early hominin diet based on dental microwear and stable isotopes. Thus, it is likely that either the diets of some australopiths included a high proportion of foods these taxa were poorly adapted to consume (i.e., foods that they would not have processed efficiently), or that aspects of what we thought we knew about the functional morphology of teeth must be wrong. Evaluation of these possibilities requires a recognition that analyses based on microwear, isotopes, finite element modeling, and enamel chips and cracks each test different types of hypotheses and allow different types of inferences. Microwear and isotopic analyses are best suited to reconstructing broad dietary patterns, but are limited in their ability to falsify specific hypotheses about morphological adaptation. Conversely, finite element analysis is a tool for evaluating the mechanical basis of form‐function relationships, but says little about the frequency with which specific behaviors were performed or the particular types of food that were consumed. Enamel chip and crack analyses are means of both reconstructing diet and examining biomechanics. We suggest that current evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that certain derived australopith traits are adaptations for consuming hard foods, but that australopiths had generalized diets that could include high proportions of foods that were both compliant and tough. Am J Phys Anthropol 151:339–355, 2013.© 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:Australopithecus  Paranthropus  microwear  carbon isotope  biomechanics
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