| 21. | Their average cranial capacity of 1600 cm 3 was notably larger than the 1250 1400 cm 3 typical for modern humans.
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| 22. | The implication of Conroy's finding " is that something is very wrong with the published record of early hominid cranial capacities,"
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| 23. | The small cranial capacity estimated at about 590-600 cc ( cubic centimeters ) is in part attributed to this cranial distortion.
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| 24. | It is also used to study correlating between cranial capacity with other cranial measurements and in comparing skulls from different beings.
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| 25. | The cranial capacity of the specimen is approximately 9 cubic centimeters, well below the threshold of even the earliest identified proto-hominids.
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| 26. | Neanderthals are known for their large cranial capacity, which at 1600 cm 3 is larger on average than that of modern humans.
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| 27. | The skull appears to be the size of that of a modern common chimpanzee with a similar cranial capacity and smallish teeth.
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| 28. | The victims were born with microcephaly, a condition in which the head or cranial capacity is unusually small, which can cause mental disabilities.
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| 29. | A more accurate way of measuring cranial capacity, is to make an endocranial cast and measure the amount of water the cast displaces.
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| 30. | It appears to be the size of a modern common chimpanzee with a similar cranial capacity, but small teeth comparable to hominids '.
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