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Before reading the article, may I ask what you are aiming to achieve by asking this question? In other words, if it were just a myth, what would the implications be, you think?
It is a myth propagated in some dive literature including dive training agency's textbooks. Some textbooks I am reading now say that we lose 75% of our body heat through our heads. This is a gross exageration of the amount of heat that we lose through our heads when we dive. It would imply that we are better off wearing a drysuit over our heads somehow and we would be much warmer than we are now when diving. It doesn't add up. As diving educators, we need to be precise and accurate in the information we pass down to our students and fight this type of myths.
If you head is the only part of your body that is losing heat, you will be losing 100% of the heat you are losing through your head in that sense for sure However, if you expose your head and another part of your body with the same surface area, they will be losing heat at the same rate or the head will lose heat with slightly higher % but not much higher.
I havent been able to find a good single reference source, but from looking at several, it appears the rate of heat loss from the head is significantly greater per unit of surface area than from most of the rest of your body because there isnt much fat insulation on (most) heads, and because vasoconstriction is not as effective on the head. Other areas often mentioned as heat loss areas are the armpits and groin.... if you expose your head and another part of your body with the same surface area, they will be losing heat at the same rate or the head will lose heat with slightly higher % but not much higher.
I read it and I am even more confused now, here is what it says:
"18. LOSE MOST OF YOUR HEAT FROM YOUR HEAD? This is a popular myth. Head heat loss is not the majority of heat lost. Not even close. The heat you lose from your head is small compared to the rest of your body, and varies with temperature and exercise.
Head heat loss is linear with temperature, meaning the lower the temperature, the higher percentage head heat loss. At 0 degrees Centigrade, up to about 30 to 35% of heat could be lost through your head at rest. When exercising at about a work rate of 50% of aerobic capacity, head heat loss falls to less than half that.