New study on Neanderthal cranio-facial morphology published on the Proceedings of the Royal Society B

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Our new study on Neanderthal cranio-facial morphology, led by Prof. Wroe from the University of New England, was recently published on the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. We have employed a combination of different methods using geometric morphometrics (for the virtual reconstruction), finite element analysis, and computational fluid dynamics, where we suggest that the large noses characterising the Neanderthal species helped them to breathe more air while they were running and hunting.

 

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This research has also received an exetensive international media attention, with articles on major newspapers, including The Guardian, Daily Mail and Cosmos Magazine. Here a couple of links:

Daily Mail

The Guardian

Comsos Magazine

The Times

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Luca Fiorenza

Luca is Head of the Palaeodiet Research Lab and he received his Bachelor/Master degree in Natural Sciences in 2003 at La Sapienza University in Rome (Italy), and completed his PhD in Biological Sciences between the Goethe University and the Senckenberg Research Institute (Frankfurt, Germany) at the end of 2009. During his doctoral degree he was part of an outstanding multidisciplinary network called EVAN (European Virtual Anthropology Network), where he mastered cutting-edge techniques for the study of anatomical variability, including medical imaging, 3D digitisation, display, modelling and programming. Luca’s research interests mostly focus on functional morphology of the masticatory apparatus in human and non-human primates, and on the importance of the role of diet in human evolution.

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