4.3 Article

Technical Note: The Midline and Endocranial Volume of the Taung Endocast

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Volume 146, Issue 2, Pages 319-322

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.21570

Keywords

Taung; endocast; symmetry; midsagittal plane; brain evolution

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The Taung endocast is one of the best-preserved and most important known in paleoanthropology. Although the endocast is undistorted and preserves distinctive landmarks, Taung has proved a difficult endocast, because it is only about 60% complete. To reconstruct Taung it is necessary to first use the available anatomical landmarks to define the midline of the endocast. It is only with a proper description of the midline that it is possible to reconstruct the endocast and obtain an accurate measurement of Taung's endocranial volume. Holloway (Science 168 (1970) 966-968) determined a conservative estimate for Taung of 404 ml. More recently this estimate has been revised downward by Falk and Clarke (Am J Phys Anthropol 134 (2007) 529-534) to 382 ml, giving Taung the smallest endocast for A. africanus. Certain challenges exist with the reconstruction of any endocast, particularly a hemi-endocast such as Taung. A virtual reconstruction of Taung must assume perfect symmetry, a feature called into question here in Taung's most recent reconstruction by Falk and Clarke (2007). Holloway's (1970) reconstruction of Taung provides a guidepost for a conservative approach to endocast reconstructions, and the most reliable measurement of Taung's true endocranial volume. Am J Phys Anthropol 146:319-322, 2011. (C) 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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