National Geographic Daily News
Two six-week-old cousins in Wisconsin.

Generation by generation, human heads may be growing (file picture).

Photograph by Paul Damien, National Geographic

Dave Mosher

for National Geographic News

Published June 6, 2012

Modern life may be going to your head.

It's not clear whymedicine? cars? supermarkets?but the skulls of white Americans, and perhaps of other races and nationalities, have become slightly taller and roomier, according to new forensic research.

(See more health news.)

New measurements of hundreds of skulls of white Americans born between 1825 and 1985 suggest that their typical noggin height has grown by about a third of an inch (eight millimeters).

It may not sound like much, but the growth translates to roughly a tennis ball's worth of new brain room.

"I can't guess the implications of this jump in cranial size, but other research shows a bigger cranium doesn't necessarily mean more intellect," said University of Tennessee biological anthropologist Richard Jantz, who presented the findings with colleagues at an American Association for Physical Anthropology meeting in April.

(Related: "Can Sugar Make You Stupid? 'High Concern' in Wake of Rat Study.")

Ups and Downs of Evolution

Beginning with the dawn of the first Homo species, human skulls evolved to be increasingly bigger until about 30,000 years ago, when head size plateaued.

And about 5,000 or 6,000 years ago, when agriculture took off in earnest, skulls began shrinking. The cause of the shrinkage is a mystery, but scientists have tentatively fingered more efficient brain wiring and easier access to food and safety—the idea being that people no longer had to be especially smart to survive (aka the Idiocracy theory).

About ten years ago Jantz and colleagues were measuring skeletons and saw signs that the shrinking trend may be reversing. Since then, they've amassed data on 1,500 skulls spanning 160 years.

The specimens came from three collections to which only adult skeletons could be donated. And since mostly adult Caucasian Americans regularly donated to the collections, the researchers' conclusions so far are known to apply to that group alone.

(Also see "T. Rex, Other Dinosaurs Had Heads Full of Air.")

Americans Experimenting on Themselves?

Jantz cautioned that American life has changed in too many ways to pinpoint a single cause for the skull growth.

"I am absolutely certain, however, that it's due to the unparalleled environment that we now live in," he said.

"Americans drive cars, vaccinate their children—and an excess of food is now a bigger problem than undernutrition, among many other things. It's almost as if we're conducting an experiment on ourselves to see how we'll respond to a totally new environment."

University of Texas demographer Corey Sparks said the new conclusions seem to be valid but was equally cautious not to suggest an exact cause.

"I grabbed a ruler to physically see the changes they describe, and eight millimeters is not much change at all. An inch? That'd be huge," said Sparks, who helped Jantz with skull-measuring scientific work many years ago but was not involved in the new research.

As for the possible causes, he added, "We like to infer things outside of our data to try and explain a story—a pattern—but there is no smoking gun for what is causing these changes."

More brain science: Get evolutionary answers to why teenagers can be so moody, impulsive, and maddening >>

0 comments
Sort: Newest | Oldest

Trending News

  • Week in Space - Picture of the Pavlof volcano, as seen from space, emitting a plume of ash

    Week's Best Space Pictures

    The Ring Nebula shines, a volcano erupts, and Germans see the bat signal in this week's best new space pictures.

  • In this Feb. 6, 2011 photo made available Feb. 8, and provided by the Fire & Emergency Services Authority of Western Australia, Gosnell firefighters battles a wildfire at the rear of a house in the Perth, Australia, suburb of Roleystone. Police said at least 68 homes were lost in the blaze, believed to have been started by sparks from an angle grinder. (AP Photo/FESA, Evan Collis) EDITORIAL USE ONLY

    Australia as Climate Predictor

    As extreme weather seems to accelerate globally, scientists believe events Down Under can help explain what to look for-and guard against.

  • Cicadas on skewers in Beijing, China.

    How to Eat Cicadas

    Cicadas bugging you? See our recipe ideas for the low-fat critters, including the new candied cicada cocktail.

Celebrating 125 Years

Connect With Nat Geo

Shop National Geographic

    SHOP NOW »