A review of the distal femur in Australopithecus

IF 4.6 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Catherine K. Miller, Jeremy M. DeSilva
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Abstract

In 1938, the first distal femur of a fossil Australopithecus was discovered at Sterkfontein, South Africa. A decade later, another distal femur was discovered at the same locality. These two fossil femora were the subject of a foundational paper authored by Kingsbury Heiple and Owen Lovejoy in 1971. In this paper, the authors discussed functionally relevant anatomies of these two fossil femora and noted their strong affinity to the modern human condition. Here, we update this work by including eight more fossil Australopithecus distal femora, an expanded comparative dataset, as well as additional linear measurements. Just as Heiple and Lovejoy reported a half-century ago, we find strong overlap between modern humans and cercopithecoids, except for inferiorly flattened condyles and a high bicondylar angle, both of which characterize modern humans and Australopithecus and are directly related to striding bipedalism. All other measured aspects of the femora are by-products of these key morphological traits. Additional fossil material from the early Pliocene will help to inform the evolution of the hominin distal femur and its condition in the Pan-Homo common ancestor that preceded bipedal locomotion.

南方古猿股骨远端研究进展。
1938年,在南非的Sterkfontein发现了第一具南方古猿化石的远端股骨。十年后,在同一位置发现了另一根远端股骨。这两个化石股骨是金斯伯里·海普尔和欧文·洛夫乔伊在1971年撰写的一篇基础论文的主题。在本文中,作者讨论了这两个化石股骨的功能相关解剖学,并指出它们与现代人类状况有很强的亲和力。在这里,我们更新了这项工作,包括八个化石南方古猿股骨远端,一个扩大的比较数据集,以及额外的线性测量。正如heple和Lovejoy在半个世纪前所报道的那样,我们发现现代人和颈猿之间有很强的重叠,除了下扁平的髁和高的双髁角,这两个特征都是现代人和南方古猿的特征,与跨步两足动物直接相关。股骨的所有其他测量方面都是这些关键形态特征的副产品。来自上新世早期的额外化石材料将有助于了解人类远端股骨的进化及其在两足运动之前的泛人共同祖先中的状况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
5.40%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Anthropology is an authoritative review journal that focuses on issues of current interest in biological anthropology, paleoanthropology, archaeology, functional morphology, social biology, and bone biology — including dentition and osteology — as well as human biology, genetics, and ecology. In addition to lively, well-illustrated articles reviewing contemporary research efforts, this journal also publishes general news of relevant developments in the scientific, social, or political arenas. Reviews of noteworthy new books are also included, as are letters to the editor and listings of various conferences. The journal provides a valuable source of current information for classroom teaching and research activities in evolutionary anthropology.
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