Why Do Some
People Have A Tiny Extra Hole In Their Ear?
You might have noticed that a few people have a barely noticeable hole where the top of their ear cartilage meets their face. Believe it or not, it’s probably not the remnants of an old piercing they had when they were 15.
Just 0.1 percent of the population
have it in the US, 0.9 percent in the UK, and as many as 4 to 10 percent
in Asia and parts of Africa, according to one study. In South Korea, that figure could
be as high as 5 percent, and it’s most common in people of African or
Asian descent.
It’s
actually a congenital disorder called preauricular sinus. Although harmless in itself, it
can be susceptible to infection. It is caused by the first and second
pharyngeal arches. This is a structure found in all vertebrates
that occurs during embryonic development. In mammals, they go on to form
the structures of the head and neck, but in fish they also help develop into
their gills.
It’s this odd connection
that led Neil Shubin, an evolutionary biologist, to speculate that the
holes could be an “evolutionary remnant of fish gills,” according to Business Insider. Of course, that’s currently a
theory that hasn’t been scientifically tested. But nevertheless, when
you think that we still have tailbones, goosebumps, and appendixes from
our evolutionary forebearers, it’s certainly not impossible.
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