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- Bf4d3b52337b48c860e4c6dd8fe9cf932 source "Wikipedia:Occipital_bun" @default.
- Bf4d3b52337b48c860e4c6dd8fe9cf932 taxon "Homo erectus" @default.
- Bf4d3b52337b48c860e4c6dd8fe9cf932 type Axiom @default.
- Bf4d3b52337b48c860e4c6dd8fe9cf932 annotatedProperty UBPROP_0000008 @default.
- Bf4d3b52337b48c860e4c6dd8fe9cf932 annotatedSource UBERON_0013448 @default.
- Bf4d3b52337b48c860e4c6dd8fe9cf932 annotatedTarget "Sagittal keels occur in Homo erectus and occasionally Homo heidelbergensis, where they probably served as an armour against shock to the roof of the skull, and as the attachment point for the temporalis muscles. Most Homo sapiens lost them likely as part of the general trend toward thinning of the cranial bones during the Pleistocene, to make room for larger brains. However there is a very small portion of modern humans who have this, but its function and etiology are unknown. Patrick Stewart of Star Trek and the martial artist Shi Yan Ming present good examples of modern humans with this feature." @default.