If you’re among these people who have a tiny hole next to your ear, you’re in the very few in the world.
Though all humans have similar DNA, there are also some traits that make us unique, such as our fingerprints, birthmarks or skin tags. And a really small percentage of the world population has a small hole in the top front of the ear. And this is not a birthmark, nor a birth defect.
It is called an ear pit, or, medically speaking, a preauricular sinus. It was first documented as a human characteristic and not a flaw by Van Heusinger back in 1864.
And studies show that “only 1 percent of people in the US have this, as well as .9 percent in the UK and 4 to 10 percent in Asia and parts of Africa. In South Korea, as much as 5 percent of people may have it”.
The ear pit doesn’t have any particular function, nor is very visible, so you won’t mind having it. However, sometimes it can get infected like any other hole, and if you feel irritated or signs of inflammation appear, seek medical assistance and advice.
A FASCINATING STORY…
However, there is an interesting theory about the ear pit. The evolutionary biologist, Neil Shubin has a theory that these extra ear holes might be a remnant of the evolution of the humans who evolved from fish people, or, mermaids.
It is scientifically proven that over the extremely long process of the development of Earth such as we know it now, many different phases have occurred – hot lava, frozen lands, and oceans all over the surface.
This ear pit hole might just be a leftover proof of our ancestors who once lived under the water.