The variation in frequency of the Inca bone was examined in major human populations around the world.
The New World populations have generally high frequencies of the Inca bone, whereas lower frequencies
occur in northeast Asians and Australians. Tibetan/Nepalese and Assam/Sikkim populations in northeast
India have more Inca bones than do neighbouring populations. Among modern populations originally
derived from eastern Asian population stock, the frequencies are highest in some of the marginal isolated
groups. In Central and West Asia as well as in Europe, frequency of the Inca bone is relatively low. The
incidence of the complete Inca bone is, moreover, very low in the western hemisphere of the Old World
except for Subsaharan Africa. Subsaharan Africans show as a whole a second peak in the occurrence of the
Inca bone. Geographical and ethnographical patterns of the frequency variation of the Inca bone found in
this study indicate that the possible genetic background for the occurrence of this bone cannot be
completely excluded. Relatively high frequencies of the Inca bone in Subsaharan Africans indicate that
this trait is not a uniquely eastern Asian regional character.