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Tooth Histology

All articles tagged with #tooth histology

Neanderthal Infants Grew Faster Than Modern Humans, Study Finds
science29 days ago

Neanderthal Infants Grew Faster Than Modern Humans, Study Finds

The Amud 7 Neanderthal infant from Amud Cave in Israel—dated to about 51,000–56,000 years ago and the most complete Neanderthal infant skeleton found—shows Neanderthal babies grew their bodies faster than modern human babies, with rapid somatic growth outpacing tooth development (teeth suggested an age closer to six months, vs. about 13.7 months for bone growth). This accelerated early growth, including larger skulls, likely reflects an evolutionary strategy to adapt to harsh environments, with growth trajectories eventually converging with Homo sapiens.

archaeology1 month ago

Neanderthal Infants Grew Faster Than Modern Humans, Israeli Study Shows

Analysis of Amud 7, the most complete Neanderthal infant, shows Neanderthal babies grew much faster than modern humans: dental age (~6 months) underestimates skeletal growth (~13.7 months), meaning rapid early body growth that later evens out with modern trajectories; dating to ~51–56k years ago, the study suggests accelerated early development as an adaptive strategy and notes interbreeding with Homo sapiens.

Neanderthal Babies Were Bigger and Grew Faster Than Modern Humans
science1 month ago

Neanderthal Babies Were Bigger and Grew Faster Than Modern Humans

A six‑month‑old Neanderthal infant from a cave in northern Israel (about 51,000–56,000 years old) was larger and grew faster than modern human babies; despite thick bones and a large skull suggesting advanced maturity, tooth histology showed a younger age, pointing to accelerated growth and higher energy expenditure in Neanderthals and highlighting differences in development alongside evidence of interbreeding with Homo sapiens.