The presence of a projecting chin (mental eminence) is a unique anatomical feature of modern humans and has long resisted definitive functional explanation. Prevailing hypotheses emphasize mandibular reinforcement, speech mechanics, or sexual signaling; however, these explanations fail to account for the chin’s exclusivity to humans and its everyday interaction with food during eating. This paper proposes a novel, behaviorally grounded hypothesis: the human chin evolved as a heritable anatomical adaptation that physically catches and retains spilled food during upright feeding, thereby reducing caloric loss. This function is uniquely relevant to bipedal, upright humans who eat prepared foods socially and manually. By framing the chin as a food-retention surface rather than a structural or ornamental feature, this model explains its emergence, persistence, and species-specific distribution.
Scott (Dunn) Jessica Lorraine (Mon,) studied this question.