“…Sexual dimorphism of the human bony pelvis has long been the focus of intense investigation, reflecting the functional importance of this complex skeletal structure (Berge, Orban‐Segebarth, & Schmid, ; Betti, ; Brown, ; Caldwell & Moloy, ; Krogman, ; Kurki, ; Laitman & Albertine, ; Lewton, ; Lovejoy, ; Mallard, Savell, & Auerbach, ; Rosenberg, ; Ruff, ; Schaffer & Thane, ; Tague, ; Tague, ; Tague & Lovejoy, ; Thoms & Greulich, ; Washburn, ). Central to these studies have been differences in the obstetric canal (the true pelvis), which exist because of demands placed on the female pelvis for childbirth.…”