Ricardo Miguel Godinho
University of York
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Featured researches published by Ricardo Miguel Godinho.
Nature Communications | 2015
Rodrigo S. Lacruz; Timothy G. Bromage; Paul O’Higgins; Juan Luis Arsuaga; Chris Stringer; Ricardo Miguel Godinho; Johanna Warshaw; Ignacio Martínez; Ana Gracia-Téllez; José María Bermúdez de Castro; Eudald Carbonell
Neanderthals had large and projecting (prognathic) faces similar to those of their putative ancestors from Sima de los Huesos (SH) and different from the retracted modern human face. When such differences arose during development and the morphogenetic modifications involved are unknown. We show that maxillary growth remodelling (bone formation and resorption) of the Devils Tower (Gibraltar 2) and La Quina 18 Neanderthals and four SH hominins, all sub-adults, show extensive bone deposition, whereas in modern humans extensive osteoclastic bone resorption is found in the same regions. This morphogenetic difference is evident by ∼5 years of age. Modern human faces are distinct from those of the Neanderthal and SH fossils in part because their postnatal growth processes differ markedly. The growth remodelling identified in these fossil hominins is shared with Australopithecus and early Homo but not with modern humans suggesting that the modern human face is developmentally derived.
Human Remains: Another Dimension#R##N#The Application of Imaging to the Study of Human Remains | 2017
Ricardo Miguel Godinho; Paul O’Higgins
Abstract Human skeletal remains and fossils are often fragmented and distorted, limiting further research. Thus, reconstruction has long been used to restore the original morphology of specimens and enable subsequent research. With advances in computing and imaging, virtual reconstruction approaches are increasingly being applied to this task. Thus, models of fragmentary remains are increasingly being reconstructed from medical images, using visualization software and geometric morphometric techniques to repair defects and restore symmetry. In this chapter, we review some virtual reconstruction techniques and provide a description of CT-based virtual reconstruction applied to a fossil hominin, the Kabwe 1 cranium. This specimen is dated from 150 to 250 thousand years ago and was reconstructed to enable further biomechanical research, however the approaches and tools used to make the reconstruction are directly applicable to more recent skeletal remains.
Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2018
Ricardo Miguel Godinho; Penny Spikins; Paul O’Higgins
Uniquely, with respect to Middle Pleistocene hominins, anatomically modern humans do not possess marked browridges, and have a more vertical forehead with mobile eyebrows that play a key role in social signalling and communication. The presence and variability of browridges in archaic Homo species and their absence in ourselves have led to debate concerning their morphogenesis and function, with two main hypotheses being put forward: that browridge morphology is the result of the spatial relationship between the orbits and the brain case; and that browridge morphology is significantly impacted by biting mechanics. Here, we virtually manipulate the browridge morphology of an archaic hominin (Kabwe 1), showing that it is much larger than the minimum required to fulfil spatial demands and that browridge size has little impact on mechanical performance during biting. As browridge morphology in this fossil is not driven by spatial and mechanical requirements alone, the role of the supraorbital region in social communication is a potentially significant factor. We propose that conversion of the large browridges of our immediate ancestors to a more vertical frontal bone in modern humans allowed highly mobile eyebrows to display subtle affiliative emotions.Virtual manipulation of the archaic hominin specimen Kabwe 1’s browridge and biting simulations reveal a limited spatial and biomechanical role, opening up the possibility that the hominin supraorbital region was co-opted for social signalling after facial reduction and morphological changes in the frontal bone.
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2018
Luciana Sianto; Sérgio Augusto de Miranda Chaves; Isabel Teixeira-Santos; Paula Alves Pereira; Ricardo Miguel Godinho; David Gonçalves; Ana Luísa Santos
The period of European maritime expansion that started in the fifteenth century had a great impact on trading, on human migrations and consequently in the dispersion of infectious diseases. Portugal was at the core of this expansion; however, studies about parasitic infections, especially helminths, are lacking. This study aims to help reduce this gap presenting the results of microscopic analysis of soil sediments collected from the São Jorge churchyard of Sarilhos Grandes (Montijo). Consecrated in the fourteenth century AD, it remained as a burial ground until the nineteenth century. Soil samples collected from the pelvic girdle of five adult individuals and samples taken as control were analysed under the microscope after current conventional methodological procedures were undertaken. Eggs from Ascaris lumbricoides were identified. Also eggs of trichostrongyle type species were identified in two individuals and may represent the first report in archaeological European samples. Food remains include potato and rice starches, muscle fibres, bivalves, pollen grains and fungi spores. The stratigraphy interpretation together with potato findings put the oldest skeletons to a chronology around the sixteenth century AD. These results are consistent with historical sources that documented the prominence of Tagus river nearby villages in maritime expansion.
Comptes Rendus Palevol | 2017
Ricardo Miguel Godinho; Viviana Toro-Ibacache; Laura C. Fitton; Paul O’Higgins
Journal of Human Evolution | 2018
Ricardo Miguel Godinho; Paul O'Higgins
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2017
Paul O'Higgins; Laura C. Fitton; Ricardo Miguel Godinho
Nature Communications | 2015
Rodrigo S. Lacruz; Timothy G. Bromage; P. O'Higgins; Juan Luis Arsuaga; Chris Stringer; Ricardo Miguel Godinho; Johanna Warshaw; Ignacio Martínez; Ana Gracia; J.M. Bermedez de Castro; E. Carbonell
Journal of Human Evolution | 2018
Ricardo Miguel Godinho; Laura C. Fitton; Viviana Toro-Ibacache; Chris Stringer; Rodrigo S. Lacruz; Timothy G. Bromage; Paul O'Higgins
Sines, História e Património, o Porto e o Mar. Actas | 2017
Paula Alves Pereira; Luciana Sianto; Sérgio Augusto de Miranda Chaves; Isabel Teixeira-Santos; David Gonçalves; Ana Luísa Santos; Alice Toso; Álvaro M. Monge Calleja; António Pereira Coutinho; Ana Cristina Araújo; Ricardo Miguel Godinho