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    Am J Phys Anthropol. 1991 Feb;84(2):193-208.

    Sexual dimorphism in the baboon facial skeleton.

    Leigh SR, Cheverud JM.

    Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208.

    Baboons exhibit marked sexual dimorphism in many aspects of their morphology. Dimorphism is especially pronounced in the face. We use finite-element analysis to investigate the ontogeny of sexual dimorphism in a cross-sectional sample of baboon (Papio sp.) faces. This method provides detailed quantitative information about size and shape changes at anatomical landmarks in the face during growth. Allometric results suggest that sexual dimorphism in facial size and shape is produced by ontogenetic scaling: males and females share a common ontogenetic trajectory. Analyses of growth in time, which complement allometric analyses, show that female growth slows much earlier than male growth, accounting for the differences between sexes. Local size and local shape follow similar patterns of growth, but changes in these variables are slower in females. Local and global facial size are much more dimorphic than local and global facial shape.

    PMID: 2021194 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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