Sagittal crests are found in robust
great apes, and some early hominins (
Paranthropus). Prominent sagittal crests are found among male
gorillas and
orangutans, but only rarely occur in male
chimpanzees such as
Bili apes. The largest sagittal crest ever discovered in the
human lineage belongs to the "Black Skull",
Paranthropus aethiopicus field number
KNM WT 17000, the earliest known robust hominid ancestor and the oldest robust australopithecine discovered to date. The prominence of the crest appears to have been an adaptation for the
P. aethiopicus' heavy chewing, and the Black Skull's cheek teeth are correspondingly large. Smaller sagittal crests are also present on the skulls of other Paranthropines, including
Paranthropus boisei and
Paranthropus robustus. The shrinking of the sagittal crest in human ancestors was widely attributed to a growing brain and shrinking teeth. However, it was discovered in 2004 by a group of researchers led by Dr. Hansell Stedman, that a
frameshift mutation shrank the individual muscle fibers of the temporalis muscle, which attached to the sagittal crest. This was believed to have allowed brain size to increase, since the crest was no longer strictly necessary, but a later paper from 2017, led by researchers from George Washington University, found that the increase in brain size and reduction of tooth size were not linked, as originally hypothesized. ==See also==