Article citationsMore>>
Fujimoto, A., Ohashi, J., Nishida, N., Miyagawa, T., Morishita, Y., Tsunoda, T., Kimura, R., & Tokunaga, K. (2008). A Replication Study Confirmed the EDAR Gene to Be a Major Contributor to Population Differentiation Regarding Head Hair Thickness in Asia. Human Genetics, 124, 179-185.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00439-008-0537-1
has been cited by the following article:
-
TITLE:
Evolution of Long Head Hair in Humans
AUTHORS:
Peter Frost
KEYWORDS:
Head Hair, Human Evolution, Sexual Selection
JOURNAL NAME:
Advances in Anthropology,
Vol.5 No.4,
November
6,
2015
ABSTRACT: In many humans, head hair can grow to a much greater length than hair elsewhere on the body. This is a “derived” form that evolved outside Africa and probably in northern Eurasia. The ancestral form, which is frizzier and much shorter, survives in sub-Saharan Africans and in other groups whose ancestors never left the tropics. This original hair form is nonetheless relatively straight and silky during infancy. Head hair thus seems to have lengthened in two stages: 1) retention of the infant hair form at older ages; and 2) further lengthening to mid-back and even waist length. These changes seem to have gone farther in women, whose head hair is thicker and somewhat longer. The most popular evolutionary explanations are: 1) relaxation of selection for short hair; and 2) sexual selection for women with long hair. Neither hypothesis is satisfactory. The first one cannot explain why head hair lengthened so dramatically over so little time. The second hypothesis suffers from the assumption that some populations have remained naturally short-haired because they consider long-haired women undesirable. Almost the opposite is true in traditional African cultures, which have a long history of lengthening and straightening women’s hair. It is argued here that sexual selection produced different outcomes in different populations not because standards of beauty differed but because the intensity of sexual selection differed. In the tropical zone, sexual selection acted more on men than on women and was thus too weak to enhance desirable female characteristics. This situation reversed as ancestral humans spread northward into environments that tended to limit polygyny while increasing male mortality. Because fewer men were available for mating, women faced a more competitive mate market and were selected more severely.
Related Articles:
-
Candia Rowel, Rose Nabatanzi, Joseph Olobo, Ann Auma, Benon Asiimwe, Olive Mbabazi, Alice Bayiyana, Annet Enzaru, Edridah Tukahebwa
-
Arshad A. Pandith, Irfan Y. Wani, Iqbal Qasim, Zafar A. Shah, Saleem Sheikh
-
Flavio Gimenes Alvarenga, Mahouton Jonas Stephane Houndjo, Adjimon Vincent Monwanou, Jean Bio Chabi Orou
-
Yun Sun, Minghui Yang, Hengrong Cui, Minhua Chen, Yukun Zhu, Xiaowei Sun
-
Magellan Guewo-Fokeng, Eugene Sobngwi, Barbara Atogho-Tiedeu, Eric Lontchi-Yimagou, Jean-Paul Chedjou, Jean-Claude Mbanya, Wilfred F. Mbacham