
Human hair under 200-times magnification

A strand of human hair under magnification
'Hair' is a filamentous outgrowth of protein, found only on
mammals. It projects from the
epidermis, though it grows from
hair follicles deep in the
dermis. Although many other organisms, especially insects, show filamentous outgrowths, these are not considered "hair". So-called "hairs" (
trichomes) are also found on
plants. The projections on
arthropods, such as
insects and
spiders are actually insect
bristles. The hair of non-
human mammal
species is commonly referred to as
fur. There are varieties of
cats,
dogs, and
mice bred to have little or no visible fur. In some species, hair is absent at certain stages of life.
The primary component of hair fiber is
keratin. Keratins are
proteins, long chains (
polymers) of
amino acids.
Human hair
Body hair

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Historically, several ideas have been advanced to describe the reduction of human
body hair. All were faced with the same problem that there is no fossil record of human hair to back up the conjectures nor to determine exactly when the feature evolved. However, recent research on the evolution of lice suggests that human ancestors lost their body hair approximately 3.3 million years ago.
[1]
Savanna theory suggests that nature selected humans for shorter and thinner body hair as part of a set of adaptations to the warm plains of the savanna, including bipedal locomotion and an upright posture. There are several problems with this theory, not least of which is that
cursorial hunting is used by other animals that do not show any thinning of hair.
Another theory for the thin
body hair on humans proposes that
Fisherian runaway sexual selection played a role here (as well as in the selection of long head hair). Possibly this occurred in conjunction with
neoteny, with the more juvenile appearing females being selected by males as more desirable; see
types of hair and
vellus hair.
The
aquatic ape hypothesis posits that sparsity of hair is an adaptation to an aquatic environment, but it has little support amongst scientists and very few aquatic mammals are, in fact, hairless.
In reality, there may be little to explain. Humans, like all primates, are part of a trend toward sparser hair in larger animals; the ''density'' of human hair follicles on the skin is actually about what one would expect for an animal of equivalent size
[2]. The outstanding question is why so much of human hair is short, underpigmented
vellus hair rather than
terminal hair.
Head hair
Head hair is a type of hair that is grown on the head (sometimes referring directly to the
scalp).The most noticeable part of human hair is the hair on the head, which can grow longer than on most mammals and is more dense than most hair found elsewhere on the body. The average human head has about 100,000 hair follicles.
[1] Its absence is termed
alopecia, commonly known as
baldness.
Anthropologists speculate that the functional significance of long head hair may be
adornment, a by-product of secondary
natural selection once other
somatic hair had been lost. Another possibility is that long head hair is a result of
Fisherian runaway sexual selection, where long lustrous hair is a visible
marker for a healthy individual (with good nutrition, waist length hair—approximately 1 meter or 39 inches long—would take around 84 months, or about 7 years, to grow). Each follicle can grow about 20 individual hairs in a person's lifetime.
[2] Average hair loss is about 100 strands a day. The average human scalp measures approximately 120 square inches (770 cm²). These values are also reported by
Desmond Morris[3] although it is not clear if these are applicable to both men and women.
'Average number of head hairs' (Caucasian)
[3]
| color | number of hairs | diameter |
|---|
| Blonde | 146,000 | 1⁄1500th to 1⁄500th inch | 17 to 51 micrometers |
| Black | 110,000 | 1⁄400th to 1⁄250th inch | 64 to 100 micrometers |
| Brunette | 100,000 | variable | variable |
| Red | 86,000 | variable | variable |

Traditional Hopi hair style, photo by Edward S. Curtis, 1922
Types of hair
Humans have three different types of hair:
★
Lanugo, the fine hair that covers nearly the entire body of
fetuses
★
Vellus hair, the short, fine, "peach fuzz" body hair that grows in most places on the human body in both sexes
★
Terminal hair, the fully developed hair, which is generally longer, coarser, thicker, and darker than vellus hair.
Growth

Distribution of androgenic hair on female and male body
Different parts of the human body feature different types of hair. From childhood onward, '
vellus hair' covers the entire human body regardless of
sex or
race except in the following locations: the
lips, the palms of
hands, the soles of
feet, certain external genital areas, the
navel and
scar tissue. The
density of the hairs (in hair follicles per
square centimeter) varies from one person to another.
The rising level of male
hormones (
androgens) during
puberty causes a 'transformation process' of vellus hair into '
terminal hair' on several parts of the body. The hair follicles respond to
androgens, primarily
testosterone and its derivatives; the hair in these locations can be thus termed '
androgenic hair'. The rate of hair growth and the weight of the hairs increase. However, different areas respond with different sensitivities. As testosterone levels increase, the sequence of appearance of androgenic hair reflects the gradations of androgen sensitivity. The
pubic area is most sensitive, and heavier hair usually grows there first in response to androgens.

Layers of an individual hair
Areas on the human body that develop terminal hair growth due to rising androgens in both sexes, men and women, are the
underarms and the
pubic area. In contrast, normally only men grow androgenic hair in other areas. There is a '
sexual dimorphism' in the amount and distribution of androgenic hair, with males having more terminal hair (particularly
facial hair,
chest hair,
abdominal hair and hair on
legs and
arms) and females having more vellus hair, which is less visible. The
genetic disposition determines the sex-dependent and individual rising of androgens and therefore the development of androgenic hair.
Increased body hair on women following the male pattern can be referred to as
hirsutism. An excessive and abnormal hair growth on the body of males and females is defined as
hypertrichosis. Considering an individual occurrence of body hair as abnormal does not implicitly depend on medical indications but also on cultural and social attitudes.
Individual hairs alternate periods of growth and dormancy. During the growth portion of the cycle, hair follicles are long and
bulbous, and the hair advances outward at about a third of a
millimeter per day. After three to six months, body hair growth stops (the pubic and armpit areas having the longest growth period). The follicle shrinks and the
root of the hair grows rigid. Following a period of
dormancy, another growth cycle starts, and eventually a new hair pushes the old one out of the follicle from beneath. Head hair, by comparison, grows for a long duration and to a great length before being shed. The rate of growth is approximately 15 millimeters, or about ⅝
inch, per month.

Photo of Statue with curly hair
Texture
Hair
texture is measured by the degree of which one's hair is either fine or coarse, which in turn varies according to the diameter of each individual hair. There are usually four major types of hair texture: ''fine'', ''medium'', ''coarse'' and ''wiry''. Within the four texture ranges hair can also be thin, medium or thick density and it can be straight, curly, wavy or kinky.
Hair conditioner will also alter the ultimate equation and can be healthy, normal, oily, dry, damaged or a combination. Hair can also be textured if
straighteners, crimpers,
curlers, etc are used to style hair. Also, an expert
hairdresser can change the hair texture with the use of special chemicals.
Hair is genetically programmed to be straight, curly or wavy, and it tends to change over time.
For many years, it was believed that the shape of a person’s hair was determined by the individual hair shafts, and that curly hair was curly because the cross-section of the hair shaft was flatter and had more intertwined layers than straight hair, which was round. But scientists have determined that whether your hair is curly or straight is determined by the shape of the follicle itself and the direction in which each strand grows out of its follicle. Curly hair is shaped like an elongated oval and grows at a sharp angle to the scalp.
Curly hair has a different biological structure than straight hair. It tends to be much drier than straight hair because the oils secreted into the hair shaft by the
sebaceous glands can more easily travel down the shaft of straight hair. People with very curly hair may find that this hair type can be dry, hard to manage, and often frizzy.
Hair, whether it is curly or straight, is affected by the amount of humidity in the air. It serves as a "truth serum" for the hair, forcing water back into the hair fiber and forcing hair shaft to return to its original structure. This may be more noticeable in somebody with curly hair because it tends to get frizzy when the humidity rises.
Aging
Older people tend to develop grey hair because the
pigment in the hair is lost and the hair becomes colorless. Grey hair is considered to be a characteristic of normal aging. The age at which this occurs varies from person to person, but in general nearly everyone 75 years or older has grey hair, and in general men tend to become grey at younger ages than women.
It should be noted however, that grey hair in itself is not actually grey; the grey head of hair is a result of a combination of the dark and white/colorless hair forming an overall 'grey' appearance to the observer. As such, people starting out with very pale
blond hair usually develop white hair instead of grey hair when aging. Red hair usually doesn't turn grey with age; rather it becomes a sandy color and afterward turns white. In fact, the grey or white appearance of individual hair
fibers is a result of light scattering from air
bubbles in the central
medula of the hair fiber. Some degree of
scalp hair loss or thinning generally accompanies aging in both males and females, and it's estimated that half of all men are affected by
male pattern baldness by the time they are 50
[4]. The tendency toward
baldness is a trait shared by a number of other
primate species, and is thought to have evolutionary roots.
It is commonly claimed that hair and nails will continue growing for several days after death. This is a myth; the appearance of growth is actually caused by the retraction of skin as the surrounding tissue
dehydrates, making nails and hair more prominent.
Pathological impacts on hair
Drugs used in
cancer chemotherapy frequently cause a temporary loss of hair, noticeable on the
head and
eyebrows, because they kill all rapidly dividing
cells, not just the cancerous ones. Other
diseases and
traumas can cause temporary or permanent loss of hair, either generally or in patches.
The hair shafts may also store certain
poisons for years, even decades, after death. In the case of Col.
Lafayette Baker, who died
July 3,
1868, use of an
atomic absorption spectrophotometer showed the man was killed by white
arsenic. The prime suspect was
Wally Pollack, Baker's brother-in-law. According to Dr. Ray A. Neff, Pollack had laced Baker's
beer with it over a period of months, and a century or so later minute traces of arsenic showed up in the dead man's hair. Mrs. Baker's
diary seems to confirm that it was indeed arsenic, as she writes of how she found some vials of it inside her brother's suitcoat one day.
Width
According to ''The
Physics Factbook'', the
diameter of human hair ranges from 17 to 181
µm.
[4]
Cultural attitudes
Head hair

People from different cultures have invented various ways to arrange, or "style" their hair.
The remarkable head hair of humans has gained an important significance in nearly all present societies as well as any given historical period throughout the world. The
haircut has always played a significant
cultural and
social role.
In
ancient Egypt head hair was often shaved, especially amongst children, as long hair was uncomfortable in the heat. Children were often left with a long lock of hair growing from one part of their heads, the practice being so common that it became the standard in Egyptian art for artists to depict children as always wearing this "
sidelock". Many adult men and women kept their heads permanently shaved for comfort in the heat and to keep the head free of
lice, while wearing a
wig in public.
In
ancient Greece and
ancient Rome men and women already differed from each other through their haircuts. The head hair of women was long and pulled back into a
chignon. Many dyed their hair red with
henna and sprinkled it with
gold powder, often adorning it with fresh flowers. Men’s hair was short and even occasionally shaved. In Rome
hairdressing became ever more popular and the
upper classes were attended to by
slaves or visited public
barber shops.

Maasai warriors with their traditional hair styling
The traditional hair styling in some parts of
Africa also gives interesting examples of how people dealt with their head hair. The
Maasai warriors tied the front hair into sections of tiny
braids while the back hair was allowed to grow to waist length. Women and non-warriors, however, shaved their heads. Many tribes dyed the hair with red earth and
grease; some stiffened it with
animal dung.
Contemporary social and cultural conditions have constantly influenced popular hair styles. From the 17th century into the early 19th century it was the norm in
Western culture for men to have long hair often tied back into a
ponytail. Famous long-haired men include
René Descartes,
Giacomo Casanova,
Oliver Cromwell and
George Washington. During his younger years
Napoleon Bonaparte had a long and flamboyant head of hair. Before
World War I men generally had longer hair and
beards. The
trench warfare between 1914 and 1918 exposed men to
lice and
flea infestations, which prompted the order to cut hair short, establishing a norm that has persisted.
It has also been advanced that short hair on men has been enforced as a means of control, as shown in the military and police and other forces that require obedience and discipline. Additionally, slaves and defeated armies were often required to shave their heads, in both pre-
medieval Europe and
China.
Long hair was almost universal among women in
Western culture until
World War I. Many women in conservative
Pentecostal groups abstain from
trimming their hair after conversion (and some have never had their hair trimmed or cut at all since birth). The social revolution of the 1960s led to a renaissance of unchecked hair growth. Hair length is measured from the front
scalp line on the
forehead up over the top of the head and down the back to the floor. Standard milestones in this process of hair growing are
waist length,
hip length, classic length (midpoint on the body, where the
buttocks meet the
thighs),
thigh length, knee length, ankle length and even beyond. It takes about seven years, including occasional trims, to grow one's hair to waist length. Terminal length varies from person to person according to
genetics and overall health.
A thriving salon culture in
Detroit gave rise to the Detroit
Hair Wars in 1991. Using the medium of human and synthetic hair, elaborate fantastical head pieces, such as spider webs, flowers and flying "hair-y copters", have been made by participants.
[5]
Body hair

Mark Twain, Shirtless. A human male with body hair.
The attitudes towards hair on the human body also vary between different cultures and times. In some cultures profuse
chest hair on men is a symbol of
virility and
masculinity; other societies display a hairless body as a sign of youthfulness.
In
ancient Egypt, people regarded a completely smooth, hairless body as the standard of
beauty. An upper class Egyptian woman took great pains to ensure that she did not have a single hair on her body, except for the top of her head (and even this was often replaced with a wig
[5]). The
ancient Greeks later adopted this smooth ideal, considering a hairless body to be representative of
youth and beauty. This is reflected in Greek female sculptures which do not display any
pubic hair.
Islam stipulates many tenets with respect to hair, such as the covering of hair by women and the removal of armpit and pubic hair (see
five physical characteristics traits of fitrah).
In
Western societies it became a public trend during the late twentieth century, particularly for women, to reduce or to remove their body hair. The
bikini and
Brazilian waxing fashion as well as the sexual imagery in advertising and movies are major reasons for this development. This media trend began in the
United States and is becoming ever more popular throughout other Western countries. It was also beginning to gain currency among men, among whom shaving or trimming one's body hair is sometimes jokingly called "
manscaping".
Hair as business factor
Hair care for humans is a major world industry with specialized tools, chemicals and techniques.
The business of various products connected with human hair has become an important industrial and financial factor in
Western societies.
External links
★
Discussion about shaving and cultures
★
Hair disorders from the Cleveland Clinic
★
Answers to several questions related to hair from curious kids
References
1. Wade, N. (2007). In Lice, Clues to Human Origin and Attire. New York Times, 156(53877), A17-A17.
2. G.G. Shwartz & L.A. Rosenblum, Allometry of primate hair density and the evolution of human hairlessness, American Journal of Physical Anthropology vol. 55 issue 1
3. The Naked Woman - A study of the Female Body, , Desmond, Morris, Thomas Dunne Books, 2004, ISBN 978-0-312-33853-4
4. "Uncovering the bald truth about hair loss." ''Springfield News-leader'', May 10, 2005. "Half of men" estimate is made by the American Academy of Dermatology and specifically estimates prevalence in the U.S. population, though this should reflect prevalence in other populations.
5. Dersin, Denise, et al. (Eds.) (1996). ''What Life Was Like On the Banks of the Nile''. Richmond, Virginia: Time-Life Books.