Changing perspectives on early hominin diets

It is axiomatic that knowledge of the diets of extinct hominin species is central to any understanding of their ecology and our evolution. The importance of diet in the paleontological realm has led to the employment of multiple approaches in its elucidation. Some of these have deep historical roots...

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Published in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 120; no. 7; p. e2201421120
Main Authors: Teaford, Mark F, Ungar, Peter S, Grine, Frederick E
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States National Academy of Sciences 14-02-2023
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Summary:It is axiomatic that knowledge of the diets of extinct hominin species is central to any understanding of their ecology and our evolution. The importance of diet in the paleontological realm has led to the employment of multiple approaches in its elucidation. Some of these have deep historical roots, while others are dependent upon more recent technical and methodological advances. Historically, studies of tooth size, shape, and structure have been the gold standard for reconstructing diet. They focus on species-level adaptations, and as such, they can set theoretical brackets for dietary capabilities within the context of specific evolutionary moments. Other methods (e.g., analyses of dental calculus, biogeochemistry, and dental microwear) have only been developed within the past few decades, but are now beginning to yield evidence of the actual foods consumed by individuals represented by fossil remains. Here we begin by looking at these more "direct" forms of evidence of diet before showing that, when used in conjunction with other techniques, these "multi-proxy" approaches can raise questions about traditional interpretations of early hominin diets and change the nature of paleobiological interpretations.
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Edited by C. Lovejoy, Kent State University, Kent, OH; received February 11, 2022; accepted December 23, 2022
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2201421120