Intraspecific Variation of Cranial Morphology in Extant Hominoidea

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Anthropology

Abstract

There is still no consensus on the definition of a species, and this becomes an even greater problem when attempting to classify extinct specimens. Though some researchers have compared the morphology of extant taxa with that of palaeospecies, not enough is known about morphological variation in living taxa to be able to make estimations about past levels of intraspecies variation.
This project will examine the levels of variation in the skull shape of apes (Hominoidea), both within species and between taxa. Using geometric morphometric techniques, a large sample of ape skull shape data will be collected from museum specimens.
This data will be used to determine the existence of allometric scaling and modularity in all ape species, and how this interacts with sexual dimorphism. Additionally, the evolutionary rates of change for various skull traits will be investigated in order to determine if all shape changes evolved together or at different rates. It is hoped that this in-depth investigation of hominoid skull morphology will be the first step in using extant species' morphology to make accurate predictions about species boundaries in extinct species.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
NE/W502716/1 01/04/2021 31/03/2022
1917579 Studentship NE/W502716/1 01/10/2017 24/10/2022 Anna Westland