The typical explanation for why humans have smaller jaws than early primates is that our diets changed, and so we didn’t “need” bigger jaws.
Maybe, if you're getting your typical explanations from outdated high school biology books.
Human skull and bone structure along with genes relating to muscle strength, have to do with our giant brains and the necessary skull changes to accommodate them.
I'm not bothered enough to find the relevant papers, despite the fact that someone is wrong on the internet.
-- EDITED--
The old-school view of evolution as tiny little changes over a ridiculously long period of time is turning out to be not quite exactly true.
Yeaaaah... I'm done reading that article. (The above has not been true of the school of evolution since BEFORE Stephen J. Gould)
Can the late Steven Jay Gould be a hack and yet still have accurate ideas about some scientific issues? If I only believed statements by people who were absolutely above reproach, I wouldn't believe much.
Great layperson's explanation of a complicated genetic phenomenon. Because 3 out of 64 codons are "stop" codons, almost every frameshift error results in truncation of the affected protein.
The notion of frameshift mutations is interesting. Though, for the example he gives, I don't see why the initial mutation (large jaw, small jaw muscles) succeeded. Why wouldn't the primates with big, weak jaws be outbred before they could evolve smaller jaws and larger brains?
Ah, maybe there was no real benefit to having a stronger jaw? Only solution I can think of.
To answer your question, a lot of paleontologists believe that hominid dietary changes from cooking, which came before Homo sapiens and somewhat after the genetic change mentioned in the submitted article, eliminated selection pressure in favor of strong chewing power, because food became softer, more digestible, and thus more nourishing. This allowed the ancestral line to Homo sapiens to devote more total bodily energy to growing a large brain (also enabled by the mechanisms mentioned in the submitted article) and much less energy to developing a hindgut that can digest raw vegetable foods. So there were several synergistic influences that allowed a diverging body plan between the chimpanzee line and the Homo sapiens line.
This Economist article (previously submitted to HN)
I am not an evolutionary biologist (I do write software for a lot of research biologists) but I don't think there was anyone walking around with tiny jaw muscles and a huge jaw. I suspect the development of the jaw is related to the same gene. What that article attempts to say, and fails to do it, is that HUGE changes often happen in a single generation.
There's a contagious non lethal dog tumor that used to be a dog, as in an individual dog.
I had the same question. It is possible that the trait survived as a recessive one for a long time. In the same way that sickle-cell is only lethal if a person has the defect in both sets of chromosomes (homozygous recessive), the weaker jaw muscles would only be a disadvantage for big-jawed primates if they were homozygous recessive. Later, when alleles for smaller jaws appeared, the weak-jaw-muscle allele had a higher chance of being propagated.
Another possibility is that the myosin heavy chain, or a related regulatory function, induces larger jaws. Without this the jaw was not given enough stimulus to grow large enough.
I think people often think of natural selection as only allowing the best to exist, when really it allows what can exist to exist, even if the mutation provides no benefit.
When you get down to it, natural selection is merely about who is able to create the most successful offspring. The fact that the offspring have very similar traits as their parents is the reason why these offspring are themselves likely to reproduce successfully. The question then is weaker jaw muscles somehow became more prevalent than stronger ones. As I explained in another comment, this might be because the trait was able to survive recessively until a good genetic environment was available.
Well, doesn't it depend on how harsh the environment is? For example, if there's not enough food for the population then only those most capable of acquiring food will survive. But today, where we have great plenty (in some parts of the world) and advanced medical care etc, what you said is certainly true.
Maybe, if you're getting your typical explanations from outdated high school biology books.
Human skull and bone structure along with genes relating to muscle strength, have to do with our giant brains and the necessary skull changes to accommodate them.
I'm not bothered enough to find the relevant papers, despite the fact that someone is wrong on the internet.
-- EDITED--
The old-school view of evolution as tiny little changes over a ridiculously long period of time is turning out to be not quite exactly true.
Yeaaaah... I'm done reading that article. (The above has not been true of the school of evolution since BEFORE Stephen J. Gould)