The uniquely human birth canal — a rotational, shape-shifting geometry absent in all archaic hominin taxa — is conventionally explained as a passive accommodation of encephalization. The Intrapartum Oxygen Hypothesis proposes a substantive inversion. Each uterine contraction reduces uteroplacental perfusion by approximately 60%, imposing repeated hypoxic episodes on the fetal brain. Canal geometry modulates cumulative hypoxic burden: pelvic variants optimizing the rotational canal reduced that burden, improving neonatal neurodevelopmental outcomes and conferring fitness advantages. This selection pressure and pelvic reorganization formed a coevolutionary loop, extended into the behavioral domain by obligate midwifery. The Neanderthal lineage, which adopted transverse pelvic expansion rather than rotational reorganization, serves as a natural comparative experiment predicted to have sustained a higher intrapartum hypoxic burden. A Mitochondrial Nexus extends this comparison molecularly: COX2 — the terminal oxygen acceptor and primary oxygen-sensing protein of the electron transport chain — shows the deepest amino acid divergence of all 13 mitochondrially encoded proteins between modern humans and Neanderthals, with four nonsynonymous substitutions on the modern human lineage and none on the Neanderthal lineage, consistent with positive selection. L haplogroup cybrid studies provide additional support. Four testable predictions span the fossil record, comparative neurodevelopment, midwifery timing, and mitochondrial haplogroup signatures.
Jonathan Ralph Zucker (Sat,) studied this question.
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