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How Loyal Was Lucy?

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Monogamy may be cultural, but it is also rooted in our primate physiology. The key question is: When did it start? University of Arkansas anthropologist Mike Plavcan recently reexamined fossils of one of our earliest bipedal ancestors, the 4 million-year-old Australopithecus afarensis, and found hominids may not have been as marriage minded as previously thought.

He drew his conclusions from the size of bones. In species that favor multiple partners, like gorillas or orangutans, males can be more than 50 percent larger than females, apparently to help them fight off other males. But pair-bonding primates, like humans or titi monkeys, tend to show less of a difference. Previous studies on A. afarensis, including the famed Lucy, the most complete example of the species ever found, concluded that the male-to-female size ratio was about 15 percent—on a par with that of humans.

These studies were flawed, Plavcan contends, because they were ...

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