Posterior maxillary (PM) plane and anterior cranial architecture in primates
- 31 October 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Anatomical Record
- Vol. 264 (3) , 247-260
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.1167
Abstract
This study tests several hypotheses of integration between the cranial base and face in primates. After reviewing the definition and anatomical basis for the posterior maxillary (PM) plane, which demarcates the back of the midface at its junction with the sphenoid, we demonstrate how the PM plane can be identified accurately on radiographs, and confirm that it maintains a 90 degrees angle relative to the Neutral Horizontal Axis of the orbits in all primates. In addition, we use the PM plane to test Dabelow's (1929) hypothesis that the orbits and anterior cranial base are more highly integrated in anthropoids than in strepsirrhines, and we test the hypothesis that the midline anterior cranial base (planum sphenoideum) and anterior cranial floor (planum sphenoideum plus cribriform plate) in primates are highly correlated with each other relative to the PM plane. The mean angle between the anterior cranial base and the PM plane does not differ significantly from 90 degrees in anthropoids, but differs significantly in strepsirrhines. The anterior cranial base and anterior cranial floor, however, correlate well with each other relative to the PM plane in both suborders of primates, independent of orbital orientation and configuration. The PM plane, anterior cranial base, and anterior cranial floor, therefore, form an integrated structural complex, a "facial block," whose orientation relative to the posterior cranial base influences craniofacial shape among anthropoids in which orbital orientation influences the orientation of the anterior cranial base. One such effect is that increases in cranial base flexion shorten the antero-posterior length of the nasopharynx. Anal Rec 264:247-260, 2001. (C) 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- The scaling of basicranial flexion and lengthJournal of Human Evolution, 1999
- The ontogeny of cranial base angulation in humans and chimpanzees and its implications for reconstructing pharyngeal dimensionsJournal of Human Evolution, 1999
- Phenetic affinities among earlyHomocrania from East and South AfricaJournal of Human Evolution, 1996
- Basicranial flexion, relative brain size, and facial kyphosis in nonhuman primatesAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1993
- Postnatal Development of Skull Base, Neuro- and Viscerocranium in Man and Monkey: Morphometric Evaluation of CT Scans and RadiogramsCells Tissues Organs, 1993
- Ontogenetic perspective on mechanical and nonmechanical models of primate circumorbital morphologyAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1991
- Morphological variations of the crista galli and medial orbital marginAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1963
- The spheno‐ethmoidal articulation in the anterior cranial fossa of the Australian aborigineAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1955
- The mesethmoid-presphenoid relationships in the primatesAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1943