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Judi Lynn

(160,501 posts)
Mon Aug 22, 2016, 12:45 AM Aug 2016

Hot, Humid Weather May Have Helped Shape Human Noses

Hot, Humid Weather May Have Helped Shape Human Noses

Kate Horowitz
August 19, 2016 - 5:00pm

Noses may be the unsung heroes of the face. We tend to think of them as mere scent collectors, but noses do so much more, including make it possible for humans to survive in different climates all over the world. A study published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology explores how that may have come about.

Your nose acts like a portable, personal HVAC system, treating the air you inhale to make it easier for your body to process. In the winter, your nose warms the air so that it’s nice and toasty by the time it reaches your lungs. In arid climates, our noses add humidity to our inhalations to keep our respiratory tracts from drying out.

Human nose shape, like skin color, generally varies by latitude. Scientists have suggested that northern Europeans’ thin, pointy noses evolved to help their ancestors process their homelands’ cold, dry air, since narrow nasal passages mean that a greater percentage of inhaled air has to come into contact with heat- and moisture-adding mucous membranes. This, the researchers believed, was the only way the nose has evolved: away from the flatter, wider noses of people living closer to the Equator. The air in those regions is typically hot and humid already, requiring no special treatment. So if the winter nose is a custom job, they said, the summer nose must be the base model.

But "we don't really think that that's true," said biological anthropologist Scott Maddux of the University of North Texas Health Science Center. Maddux and his team used global climate data from 1901 to 2013 to construct maps of average annual temperature and humidity. Then, they compared those with the results of a study from 1923, which measured the noses of more than 15,000 people from 147 countries.

More:
http://mentalfloss.com/article/84951/hot-humid-weather-may-have-helped-shape-human-noses

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Hot, Humid Weather May Have Helped Shape Human Noses (Original Post) Judi Lynn Aug 2016 OP
We evolved in a tropical area Warpy Aug 2016 #1

Warpy

(111,222 posts)
1. We evolved in a tropical area
Mon Aug 22, 2016, 02:52 AM
Aug 2016

and honker shape varies widely among all populations. I don't honestly think they're on solid ground here, other than pointing out that ambient air is warmed and humidified and nose hair traps large particulates before the air gets to our lungs.

My mother had a very pronounced Hapsburg nose. I'm delighted I didn't inherit it.

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