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63. See table 1 of Hershkovitz, Kornreich, and Laron 2007.
64. Laron 2004, 1034.
65. Falk, Hildebolt, et al., “Nonpathological asymmetry,” 2009.
66. Falk, Hildebolt, et al., “Nonpathological asymmetry,” 2009, 61.
67. Obendorf, Oxnard, and Kefford 2008; Oxnard, Obendorf, and Kefford 2010.
68. Jungers, Falk, et al. 2009.
69. Falk, Hildebolt, et al., “The brain,” 2005. Obendorf, Oxnard, and Kef-
ford (2008) took their so-called measurements of the pituitary fossa from figure
2E in the Supporting Online Material of this article.
70. Jungers et al., in preparation.
71. Obendorf, Oxnard, and Keffort 2008, 1293. The apparent reason the au-
thors offered an explanation for how brain growth might be further decreased
in cretins is that, despite their other pathologies, they usually have brains that
are much larger than LB1's.
72. Obendorf, Oxnard, and Keffort 2008, 1294.
73. Culatta 2008.
74. Culatta 2008; O'Keefe 2008.
75. Brown et al. 2004; Brown 2008.
76. Brown 2008.
77. O'Keefe 2008.
78. Brown 2008.
79. Culotta 2008.
80. Eckhardt and Henneberg 2010.
81. Falk et al. 2010. See also Baab and McNulty 2009 for an assessment of
asymmetry in LB1.
82. Kaifu et al. 2010; McNulty and Baab 2010.
8. whence HOMO FLORESIENSIS ?
The first of the opening epigraphs is from Carroll 1899, 96. The second is from
Peter Brown, quoted in Kohn 2005, 41.
1. Jungers and Baab 2009, 163.
2. http://anthropology.net/2009/04/26/hobbits-in-the-haystack-homo-flo
resiensis-and-human-evolution/.
3. Forth 1998, 2005.
4. Roberts 2004.
5. Wong 2005.
6. Roberts 2004.
 
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