Is there a scientific difference between male and female waist-to-hip ratio?*

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*and if yes, how is it defined?
I found nothing per google so far so I wondered if anyone can help me with this question.

I came to this as I thought about the information that women have wider hips than men by genetics, but the waist? Men are built more “boxy” but there are some men who have wider hips and just small waists so they have a “feminine” look to them (for the torso at least) and some women I saw have, even though skinny, pretty “boxy” bodies as well, still wide hips but also very wide waists.

Is there a distinctive difference in the shape that is measurable?

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3 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

There certainly is. Because coroners can identify male or female skeletons in the event of decomposition or fires, using the shape and size of the hips.

Males generally have larger waist, smaller hips. It tapers downward.

Females tend to have smaller waist, larger hips. The hips obviously are an evolutionary advantage for child bearing.

But to be clear, this is a general population assessment. Some women have small hips, some men have big hips. And of course rampant obesity also completely throws the waistline situation out of whack

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