Grandmothering, menopause, and the evolution of human life histories
- 3 February 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 95 (3) , 1336-1339
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.95.3.1336
Abstract
Long postmenopausal lifespans distinguish humans from all other primates. This pattern may have evolved with mother–child food sharing, a practice that allowed aging females to enhance their daughters’ fertility, thereby increasing selection against senescence. Combined with Charnov’s dimensionless assembly rules for mammalian life histories, this hypothesis also accounts for our late maturity, small size at weaning, and high fertility. It has implications for past human habitat choice and social organization and for ideas about the importance of extended learning and paternal provisioning in human evolution.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hadza Women's Time Allocation, Offspring Provisioning, and the Evolution of Long Postmenopausal Life SpansCurrent Anthropology, 1997
- Hypothesis: Menopause discourages infanticide and encourages continued investment by AgnatesEvolution and Human Behavior, 1997
- The male's dilemma: Increased offspring production is more paternity to stealEvolutionary Ecology, 1995
- Why menopause?Evolutionary Ecology, 1993
- Why do female primates have such long lifespans and so few babies?orLife in the slow laneEvolutionary Anthropology, 1993
- Life history theory and evolutionary anthropologyEvolutionary Anthropology, 1993
- Evolution of senescence: late survival sacrificed for reproductionPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1991
- Stratigraphic context of fossil hominids from the Omo group deposits: Northern Turkana Basin, Kenya and EthiopiaAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1989
- Palaeoanthropological discoveries in the Middle Awash Valley, EthiopiaNature, 1984
- Residential Variation among Hunter-GatherersBehavior Science Research, 1975