The presence of a well-developed chin is considered to be one of the morphological characteristics of
Homo sapiens that
differentiates them from other human ancestors such as the closely related
Neanderthals. Early human ancestors have varied
symphysial morphology, but none of them have a well-developed chin. The origin of the chin is traditionally associated with the anterior–posterior breadth shortening of the
dental arch or tooth row; however, its general mechanical or functional advantage during feeding, developmental origin, and link with human speech, physiology, and social influence are highly debated.
Functional perspectives Louis Robinson (1913) suggests that the demand to resist
masticatory stresses triggered bone thickening in the mental region of the
mandible and ultimately formed a prominent chin. Moreover, David J. Daegling (1993) explains the chin as a functional adaptation to resist masticatory stress that causes vertical bending stresses in the
coronal plane. Others have argued that the prominent chin is adapted to resisting wishboning forces, dorso-ventral shear forces, and generally a mechanical advantage to resist lateral transverse bending and vertical bending in the coronal plane. On the contrary, others have suggested that the presence of the chin is not related to mastication. The presence of thick bone in the relatively small mandible may indicate better force resistance capacity. However, the question stands of whether the chin is an
adaptive or nonadaptive structure.
Developmental perspectives Recent works on the
morphological changes of the mandible during development have shown that the human chin, or at least the inverted-T shaped mental region, develops during the
prenatal period, but the chin does not become prominent until the early
postnatal period. This later modification happens by
bone remodeling processes (
bone resorption and
bone deposition). Coquerelle et al. suggests that the evolution of this unique characteristic was formed not by mechanical forces such as
chewing but by evolutionary adaptations involving reduction in size and change in shape of the face. Holton et al. claim that this adaptation occurred as the face became smaller compared to that of other ancient humans. The chin might also exist as an evolutionary
spandrel, a remnant of other evolutionary selection pressures.
Other perspectives Robert Franciscus takes a more anthropological viewpoint: he believes that the chin was formed as a consequence of the change in lifestyle humans underwent approximately 80,000 years ago. As humans'
hunter-gatherer societies grew into larger social networks, territorial disputes decreased because the new social structure promoted building alliances in order to exchange goods and belief systems. Franciscus believes that this change in the human environment reduced hormone levels, especially in men, resulting in the natural evolution of the chin. Overall, human beings are unique in the sense that they are the only species among
primates who have chins. In the paper
The Enduring Puzzle of the Human Chin, evolutionary anthropologists James Pampush and David Daegling discuss various theories that have been raised to solve the puzzle of the chin. They conclude that "each of the proposals we have discussed falter either empirically or theoretically; some fail, to a degree, on both accounts… This should serve as motivation, not discouragement, for researchers to continue investigating this modern human peculiarity… perhaps understanding the chin will reveal some unexpected insight into what it means to be human." == Cleft chin ==