This midline of the upper lip feature, the Winge's Peak (WP), with the Latin name
elatus labialis wingeulus,
was first scientifically elucidated in 2011 by Dr. Ralph Winge,
a USC Dental School graduate.
A WP can have a phenotypically-derived ‘hypnotic effect’ on the person(s)
watching them speak. This may help 'lure in' an audience (The Anglerfish also employs a
structural diversionary tactic to catch prey). What could otherwise be full attention being
given to the speaker's message, is now divided between the attention of the viewer into
what is being said, and how they visually follow the motion of the speaker's lip Peak.
This effect can lull viewers into thinking about some things other than the message
spoken.
He proposes that this genetically-dominant lip trait,
('God's Beauty mark on the 'Tribe of His Chosen Ones'')
along with their other 'strong mesomorphic accompanying genetics'
was contributed to homo sapien, through commingling,
by an essentially-identical, coexisting, prehistoric humanoid species tribe
he calls
homo wingeulus,
which he postulates first evolved
in the areas around Lake Nnalubaale (Victoria) and Mount Kilimanjaro,
with homo sapien before the start of migrations out of those areas to the rest of Africa and beyond.
"This very well may be the first time that a prehistoric humanoid species is being proposed
on a soft tissue representation alone," pronounces Winge.
He also says that all people who have a WP are direct descendents of homo wingeulus, and
he believes they have a 'potentially-Potentiated Functional Capacity to 'be, think, and act!''
As far as being the first African American to have a human body part named for him,
Winge relates, "I'm humbled, for sure, but we are still finding out new things about the
Human Body, so there will of course be more discoveries and elucidations ahead!"
Is this 'God's Beauty Mark on His First Powerful Ancient Ones?' (Approximately
200,000 years ago)
Elatus labialis wingeulus, a genetically-dominant physical trait, is an 'appendage' over the
upper lip's middle tubercle frontal surface, and is a naturally-occurring, variably-manifested,
vertically-oriented, differentiated soft tissue, epithelial-emanating fold or ridge or
line or prominence, or otherwise, with subepithelial components (Winge's Peak
Connective Tissue Complex), which coincides with the midline of the face
and the interincisal and mid-sagittal lines, and runs down the middle of the
middle tubercle surface of the rostral upper lip, which may extend inferiorly
from the middle of the Vermillion Border's Cupid's Bow, down to the lower
edge of the lip, with or without significant elevation above the surrounding
lateral labial tissues, with or without the presence of differentiated vermillion
surface epithelium (Winge Epithelium) seen along the linear crest of the Peak,
and with or without the presence of an inferiorly-positioned procheilon.
Ralph Winge, D.D.S., elucidator
of elatus labialis wingeulus.
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