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Moderate climate signature in cranial anatomy of late holocene human populations from Southern South America.

Lumila Paula Menéndez
Published in: American journal of physical anthropology (2017)
These results suggest that climate factors may have had a partial impact on the facial and vault shape, and therefore contributed moderately to the diversification of southern South American populations, while diet and altitude might have had a stronger impact. Therefore, cranial variation at the southern cone has been shaped both by random and nonrandom factors. Particularly, the influence of climate on skull shape has probably been the result of directional selection. This study supports that, although cranial vault is the cranial structure more associated to mean annual temperature, the impact of climate signature on morphology decreases when populations from extreme cold environments are excluded from the analysis. Additionally, it shows that the extent of the geographical scales analyzed, as well as differential sampling may lead to different results regarding the role of ecological factors and evolutionary processes on cranial morphology.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • endothelial cells
  • gene expression
  • genetic diversity
  • genome wide
  • weight loss
  • dna methylation
  • high intensity
  • data analysis