The Mystery of the Human Chin
Look in a mirror and you will see something no other primate possesses: a chin. Chimpanzees do not have one. Gorillas do not have one. Neanderthals, Denisovans, and every other extinct member of the human family tree lacked a protruding bony shelf at the base of the lower jaw. Only Homo sapiens walks around with this peculiar anatomical feature, and for more than a century, scientists have argued about why.
A new study led by Noreen von Cramon-Taubadel, professor and chair of anthropology at the University at Buffalo, offers a provocative answer: the chin is not an adaptation at all. It is an evolutionary accident, a structural byproduct of changes elsewhere in the skull. The findings appear in PLOS One.
Testing the Null Hypothesis
Previous explanations for the chin have invoked everything from speech mechanics to sexual selection to resistance against chewing stress. Each hypothesis assumes that natural selection actively favored a protruding chin, shaping it over thousands of generations because it provided some survival or reproductive advantage.
Von Cramon-Taubadel's team took the opposite approach. Rather than looking for evidence of selection, they tested the null hypothesis: that the chin could have arisen through neutral evolutionary processes, as an unselected consequence of changes in surrounding skeletal structures.
The researchers compared cranial and mandibular measurements across apes and humans, analyzing whether the evolutionary changes in the chin region align better with the signature of natural selection or with the random drift expected from a trait that is merely along for the ride.
Spandrels in Biology
The concept draws on an influential idea from the late paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould, who borrowed the architectural term "spandrel" to describe biological structures that exist not because they were designed for a purpose but because they are inevitable geometric consequences of building something else. The triangular spaces beneath the arches in a cathedral are spandrels: they are not there for decoration, even though artists later filled them with mosaics. They exist because arches must meet walls.
Von Cramon-Taubadel argues the chin is a biological spandrel. As the human face shortened and retracted over evolutionary time, driven by shifts in diet, cooking technology, and brain expansion, the lower jaw remodeled in ways that left a protruding bony ridge at the front. The chin was not the target of selection. It was the leftover.






