The growth of the basal unit of the mandible was studied by plotting the position, relative to the median plane, of the oval, mandibular and mental foramina in immature and adult skulls of Man, chimpanzee and gorilla. In Man, the basal unit was found to grow out along a constant logarithmic spiral. In the apes, the basal unit grew along a constant logarithmic spiral, the amount of unfolding being greater in the gorilla than in the chimpanzee. It is argued that the mode of growth seen in the apes evolved, as these forms became more prognathous, because it requires less compensatory rotation of the mandible, while the mode seen in Man is probably closer to that which occurred in common ancestral form.
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