As almost all of the hows and whys of human evolution are tied to estimates of body size at particular points in time, these results challenge numerous adaptive hypotheses based around the idea that the origins of Homo coincided with, or were driven by, an increase in body mass.
Researchers at the George Washington University in US provide the most comprehensive set of body mass estimates, species averages and species averages by sex for fossil hominins to date.
"One of our major results is that we found no evidence that the earliest members of our genus differed in body mass from earlier australopiths (some of the earliest species of hominins)," said Mark Grabowski, assistant research professor in the GW Centre for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology.
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"There are several untested assumptions about the origin of Homo," said Bernard Wood, University Professor of Human Origins at GW, who was not an author on the study.
"This study debunks the one that suggests that until the origin of our own genus, for one reason or another - and the usual explanation is not enough meat in the diet - all early hominins were small-bodied.
Until now, anthropologists have generally relied on estimates of hominin body mass presented in a paper by Henry M McHenry in 1992.
Since then, many more fossils have been discovered and researchers better understand the complexities of human evolution.
Grabowski and his co-authors build on and updated McHenry's results and applied new and novel methods to analyse a comprehensive fossil data set.
The study was published in the Journal of Human Evolution.