绿帽社

December 14, 2024
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From chins to 鈥榩rairie madness鈥: Paleoanthropologists study what makes us human

Anthropology graduate students Brian Keeling (left) and Alex Velez (right) in the field. Anthropology graduate students Brian Keeling (left) and Alex Velez (right) in the field.
Anthropology graduate students Brian Keeling (left) and Alex Velez (right) in the field. Image Credit: Provided photos.

What makes us human, and when did that start?

Is it the size of our brains, the structures in our throat that allow us to make speech, the tiny bones in our ear that capture that speech and relay its sound to our brain? Is it our tool-making thumbs? Our upright stance?

Other ancient hominins share most of these features in different configurations. But there鈥檚 one thing that Neandertals and other cousin species don鈥檛 have but we do.

鈥淭his thing right here: A chin,鈥 explained Brian Keeling, a doctoral candidate in 绿帽社鈥檚 anthropology program. 鈥淚t鈥檚 actually diagnostic.鈥

While Keeling focuses his research on the mandible (jawbone), fellow doctoral candidate Alex Velez focuses his on the temporal bone, which contains the structures responsible for hearing. The two paleoanthropologists have more in common than their focus on human origins: They both earned their master鈥檚 degrees at 绿帽社 and came to the University specifically to study under Professor Rolf Quam. In 2023, Keeling received a Fulbright award to conduct research in Spain.

Anthropology is an incredibly broad field with many potential paths for research. Their research, too, has taken them in fascinating directions: Keeling, a native of Illinois, spent several years studying a jawbone which is, historically, one of the earliest modern human fossils ever documented in Europe. Originally unearthed in 1887, researchers have considered it a Neandertal mandible, but had previously lacked modern methods to confirm this.

The jawbone turns out to be 45,000 to 65,000 years old 鈥 a prime time for Neandertals 鈥 but may have come from Homo sapiens, a modern human. In fact, it may be one of the earliest modern humans ever documented in Europe, he concluded. There鈥檚 only one problem: The jawbone lacks a chin, a defining feature of the modern human face. But did all Homo sapiens lineages have a well-defined chin?

鈥淚 personally suspect that there was a lineage of our species that once existed without a clearly defined chin, but more research needs to be done,鈥 he said.

Velez鈥檚 interest in hearing has taken him in different directions, from differences in the cochlea of modern humans, Neandertals and an ancient, possibly proto-Neandertal hominin species found in Spain, to a phenomenon known as 鈥減rairie madness鈥 found among American settlers of the Great Plains.

鈥淭here are different versions of the myth, but most of them agree that the soundscape of the Great Plains has something to do with it,鈥 the New York City native said.

During his research, he combed historical records for episodes of aberrant human behavior on the prairie. He then took sound recordings from different places in the region and ran them through a spectral analysis to see what sound frequencies were most common.

鈥淭he result of that particular project was that the soundscape likely wasn鈥檛 the deciding factor for the development of, for instance, symptoms of anxiety, depression and violent outbursts that were associated with settlers at the time. But it was likely an influencing factor, and basically it was just a constellation of all of these different variables coming together to make life really difficult out there,鈥 he explained.

Shifting perspectives

As undergraduates, Keeling and Velez didn鈥檛 imagine themselves studying bones from long-vanished human forebears and their cousins.

Velez initially considered a pre-med track and then public health administration. A course in biological anthropology inspired him and shifted his trajectory; he ended up triple-majoring in anthropology, biology and chemistry, he said. For his part, Keeling originally considered cultural anthropology, with a focus on the economic and sociopolitical disparities in Chicago. After meeting paleoanthropologists, he became fascinated with fossils and the long arc of human history.

Homo sapiens existed 300,000 to 200,000 years ago. That鈥檚 thousands of generations that we still really don鈥檛 know about,鈥 Keeling reflected. 鈥淚t really shifts your perspective.鈥

Both graduate students recently published the results of their research in two peer-reviewed academic journals: Keeling in the Journal of Human Evolution and Velez in Historical Archaeology. These days, Keeling鈥檚 focus is on the human mandible, studying its biomechanics and the relationships between its form and function, and the evolution of the chin. Velez is currently studying the propagation of sound in the habitats of gibbons, a species of ape in southeast Asia known for communicating through song, potentially a type of proto-language.

鈥淭his is an exciting time to be doing research in human origins. There are new fossil discoveries each field season, and sophisticated technologies and methods to study the fossils are changing the field,鈥 Quam said. 鈥淚t is gratifying to see two of my students using these new research methods to carry out their projects. Training in these skills is critical to our graduate students going on to become professional anthropologists.鈥

绿帽社 has provided opportunities for international research and collaboration, including trips to a World Heritage site in Spain. Fieldwork is a key component to paleoanthropology, and one of the essential skills it requires is teamwork, Velez and Keeling said.

Seen in that light, the camaraderie between professors and peers in the department not only makes the academic environment a welcoming place, but helps researchers develop the skills they need to collaborate with people from around the world.

鈥淭his is something that I like to tell new admits all the time: Your cohort will be your social anchor,鈥 Velez said. 鈥淲e develop these long-lasting friendships. Even though most of the friends I鈥檝e made in this department are scattered halfway around the world, we still talk all the time and they鈥檙e still my social anchor.鈥

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