Supraorbital ridge

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Superciliary arches
Gray134.png
Frontal bone. Outer surface. (Label
for "Superciliary arch" at center right).
Details
Latin Arcus superciliaris
Identifiers
Dorlands
/Elsevier
a_58/12150739
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Anatomical terms of bone
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The brow ridges are often not well expressed in modern humans, and are most easily seen in profile

The supraorbital ridge or brow ridge, known as superciliary arches in medicine, refers to a bony ridge located above the eye sockets of all primates. In Homo sapiens sapiens (modern humans) the eyebrows are located on their lower margin.

Structure

The supraorbital ridge is a nodule or crest of bone situated on the frontal bone of the skull. It forms the separation between the forehead portion itself (the squama frontalis) and the roof of the eye sockets (the pars orbitalis). Normally, in humans, the ridges arch over each eye, offering mechanical protection. In other primates, the ridge is usually continuous and often straight rather than arched. The ridges are separated from the frontal eminences by a shallow groove. The ridges are most prominent medially, and are joined to one another by a smooth elevation named the glabella.

Typically, the arches are more prominent in men than in women, and varies between different ethnic groups. Behind the ridges, deeper in the bone are the frontal sinuses.

Terminology

The supraorbital ridges, being a prominent part of the face in some ethnic groups and a trait linked to both atavism and sexual dimorphism, have a number of names in different disciplines. In vernacular English, the terms eyebrow bone or eyebrow ridge are common. The more technical terms frontal or supraorbital arch, - ridge or - torus (or - tori to refer to the plural, as the ridge is usually seen as a pair) are often found in anthropological or archaeological studies. In medicine, the term arcus superciliaris (Latin) or the English translation superciliary arch. This feature is different from the supraorbital margin and the margin of the orbit.

Some paleoanthropologists distinguish between torus and ridge. In anatomy, a torus is a projecting shelf of bone.[1] Fossil hominins, in this use of the word, have the frontal torus,[2] but modern humans only have the ridge.

Development

Spatial model

The Spatial model proposes that supraorbital torus development can be best explained in terms of the disparity between the anterior position of the orbital component relative the neurocranium.

Much of the groundwork for the spatial model was laid down by Schultz (1940). He was the first to document that at later stages of development (after age 4) the growth of the orbit would outpace that of the eye. Consequently, he proposed that facial size is the most influential factor in orbital development, with orbital growth being only secondarily affected by size and ocular position.

Weindenreich (1941) and Biegert (1957, 1963) argued that the supraorbital region can best be understood as a product of the orientation of its two components, the face and the neurocranium.

The most composed articulation of the spatial model was presented by Moss and Young (1960), who stated that "the presence… of supraorbital ridges is only the reflection of the spatial relationship between two functionally unrelated cephalic components, the orbit and the brain" (Moss and Young, 1960, p282). They proposed (as first articulated by Biegert in 1957) that during infancy the neurocranium extensively overlaps the orbit, a condition that prohibits brow ridge development. As the splanchocranium grows, however, the orbits begin to advance, thus causing the anterior displacement of the face relative to the brain. Brow ridges then form as a result of this separation.

Bio-mechanical model

The bio-mechanical model predicts that morphological variation in torus size is the direct product of differential tension caused by mastication, as indicated by an increase in load/lever ratio and broad craniofacial angle.[3]

Research done on this model has largely been based on earlier work of Endo.[4][5][6][7] By applying pressure similar to the type associated with chewing, he carried out an analysis of the structural function of the supraorbital region on dry human and gorilla skulls. His findings indicated that the face acts as a pillar that carries and disperses tension caused by the forces produced during mastication. Russell[8][9] and Oyen et al.[10] elaborated on this idea, suggesting that amplified facial projection necessitates the application of enhanced force to the anterior dentition in order to generate the same bite power that individuals with a dorsal deflection of the facial skull exert. In more prognathic individuals, this increased pressure triggers bone deposition to reinforce the brow ridges, until equilibrium is reached.

Oyen et al. conducted[11] a cross-section study of Papio anubis in order to ascertain the relationship between palate length, incisor load and Masseter lever efficiency, relative to torus enlargement. Indications found of osteoblastic deposition in the glabella were used as evidence for supraorbital enlargement. Oyen et al.’s data suggested that more prognathic individuals experienced a decrease in load/lever efficiency. This transmits tension via the frontal process of the maxilla to the supraorbital region, resulting in a contemporary reinforcement of this structure. This was also correlated to periods of tooth eruption.

In a later series of papers, Russell[8][12] developed aspects of this mode further. Employing an adult Australian sample, she tested the association between brow ridge formation and anterior dental loading, via the craniofacial angle (prosthion-nasion-metopion), maxilla breadth, and discontinuities in food preparation such as those observed between different age groups. Finding strong support for the first two criteria, she concluded that the supraorbital complex is formed as a result of increased tension due to the widening of the maxilla, thought to be positively correlated with the size of the messeter muscle, as well as with the improper orientation of bone in the superior orbital region.

Function

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The brow ridge functions to reinforce the weaker bones of the face in much the same way that the chin of modern humans reinforces their comparatively thin mandibles. This was necessary in pongids and early hominids because of the tremendous strain put on the cranium by their powerful chewing apparatuses, which is best demonstrated by any of the members of the genus Paranthropus. The brow ridge was one of the last traits to be lost in the path to anatomically modern humans, and only disappeared with the development of the modern pronounced frontal lobe. This is one of the most salient differences between Homo sapiens and the preceding archaic humans like the Homo neanderthalensis.

Image of a Rugby player with a more pronounced supraorbital ridge.

Other animals

Gorilla.

The size of these ridges varies also between different species of primates, either living or fossil. The closest living relatives of humans, the great apes, have a relatively pronounced supraorbital ridge, which has also been called a frontal torus[2] while in modern humans it is relatively reduced. The fossil record indicates that the supraorbital ridge in early hominins was reduced as the cranial vault grew; the frontal portion of the brain became positioned above rather than behind the eyes, giving a more vertical forehead.

In modern humans

Native American man with pronounced brow ridge and sloping forehead.

Forensic anthropologist Caroline Wilkenson said that Australoids have the largest brow ridges "with moderate to large supraorbital arches",[13] Caucasoids have the second largest brow ridges with "moderate supraorbital ridges",[13] Negroids have the third largest brow ridges with an "undulating supraorbital ridge"[13] and Mongoloids are "absent browridges".[13] Anthropologist Ashley Montagu said Mongoloids are "absent browridges" and he said "such ridges are absent in the skulls of both sexes in Mongoloid peoples."[14] Dr. Marta Mirazon Lahr of the Department of Biological Anthropology at Cambridge University said the "Paleoindian" has "proto-Mongoloid" "morphology" such as "pronounced development of supraorbital ridges"[15] Anthropologist Arnold Henry Savage Landor described the Ainu as having deep-set eyes and large and prominent brow ridges.[16] The 1902 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica states that in the "Australoid" "brow-ridges [are] strongly developed", in the "Negroid" "orbital ridges [are] not prominent" and in the "Mongoloid" "prominent brow-ridges" are usually absent.[17]

Anthropologist Carleton S. Coon linked brow ridge prominence to other masculine skeletal traits and hairiness when he said, "browridges, and other bony excrescences of a hypermasculine nature, are closely linked with excessive pilous development of the body and beard, and with a tendency to baldness. Europeans, on the whole, are among the hairiest-bodied and heaviest-bearded groups of men, being equaled or exceeded only by the Australians and the Ainu. Both negroid and mongoloid skin conditions are inimical to excessive hair development except upon the scalp."[18] Coon said that in "modern Finns" "[b]rowridges are usually only slightly developed."[18]

Early modern people like the finds from Skhul and Qafzeh and also some living people have quite pronounced brow ridges, but they differ from those of archaic humans like neanderthals by having a supraorbital foramen or notch, forming a groove through the ridge above each eye.[19] This splits the ridge into central parts and distal parts. In current humans, often only the central sections of the ridge are preserved (if preserved at all). This contrasts with archaic humans, where the brow ridge is pronounced and unbroken.[20]

See also

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. For some basic English definitions refer to the American Heritage Dictionary online under supraorbital and torus. Webster's Third New International Dictionary also does not make the distinction.
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  3. Oyen and Russell, 1984, p. 368-369
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  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 Wilkenson, Caroline. Forensic Facial Reconstruction. Cambridge University Press. 2004. ISBN 0521820030[page needed]
  14. Montagu, A. (1989). Growing Young. Bergin & Garvey: CT.[page needed]
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  16. Arnold Henry Savage Landor (1970). Alone with the hairy Ainu: or, 3.800 miles on a pack saddle in Yezo and a cruise to the Kurile islands[page needed]
  17. Baynes, S. & Smith, W.R. (1902). Anthropology. In Encyclopædia Britannica. (Vol.2, pp. 113.) New York, Akron, Chicago: The Werner Company.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Coon, C.S. (1939). The Races of Europe. USA: The Macmillan Company.
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Further reading

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External links