john hawks weblog

paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

bipedality

  • Bipedality and the pelvis

    Mon, 2011-10-31 23:02 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    Laboratory exercise introducing the features of the pelvis related to bipedality in hominins.

    Humans are bipeds. The pelvis in humans has undergone radical changes in orientation and shape compared to other anthropoid primates. Many of these changes serve to adapt our muscle orientations to the requirements of upright stance and bipedal locomotion.

    The most significant changes to the pelvis in humans compared to other apes are:

    Ilium
    The ilium (top portion of the innominate bone) in humans is shorter and broader. It curves around the trunk, whereas in apes it is flat against the back of the trunk.
    Greater sciatic notch
    This is very wide in apes, a function of their long, tall ilium. In humans, the notch is actually a notch.
    Anterior inferior iliac spine
    This feature is prominent in the hominin pelvis, absent or small in apes.
    Sacrum
    In humans, the sacrum is broad and short, in apes it is narrow and long, usually incorporating 6 or more sacral vertebral bodies.

    What to do: This station has four pelvic bones from the species Australopithecus africanus, which existed around 2.6 million years ago in South Africa. Assess the anatomy of these bones in comparison to humans, chimpanzees and gorillas. Are these the pelvic bones of a biped? What features point to your conclusion?

    In addition, the plaques at the front of the room have the near-complete skeleton of a fossil species, Oreopithecus bambolii, found in Tuscany and Sardinia around 8 million years ago. Look carefully at the pelvis of this skeleton. Does it resemble the living apes or humans? Does it look like Australopithecus?

  • Meet Ardipithecus ramidus

    Tue, 2011-10-04 01:56 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    A short introduction to <em>Ardipithecus</em>, focusing on the cranial base.
    Ardipithecus skeleton

    Ardipithecus ramidus comes from the period around 4.4 million years ago, and has so far been found at several field localities in Ethiopia. It lived shortly after the time that genetic evidence suggests humans share a common ancestor with chipmanzees and bonobos. Many scientists believe that Ardipithecus is on the human lineage, a hominin. Others disagree, suggesting it may be related to gorillas, chimpanzees, or an extinct lineage of apes.

    The most complete specimen of Ardipithecus is a skeleton from Aramis, in the Middle Awash field region of Ethiopia. The skeleton has grasping feet with opposable big toes, very long fingers and toes, and arms and legs approximately the same length. The anatomy of the skeleton is roughly like a quadruped, with arms and legs resembling monkeys in proportions rather than the living great apes. But the skeleton's pelvis suggests some changes that may reflect an ability to maintain an upright posture. The anatomy has given rise to a debate about what early hominins may have looked like.

    Another part of the anatomy that may reflect posture is the base of the cranium. A well-preserved temporal bone of Ardipithecus allows us to examine the length of its cranial base. You'll be comparing this anatomy (illustrated in the picture below) with some casts of fossil hominins, living humans and living great apes.

    Ardipithecus cranial base reconstruction. The temporal bone was mirrored using digital techniques, and the two were aligned by positioning the small semicircular canals of the inner ears (shown in the bottom frame).

    The petrous portion of the temporal bone points medially and anteriorly (toward the midline and front) on the cranial base. The hole in the base of the skull is called the foramen magnum. The foramen magnum admits the spinal cord to the brain, so its position reflects the posture of the cervical spine. A foramen magnum that is positioned toward the rear of the skull should reflect a more quadrupedal habitual posture. A position toward the front, with a short cranial base separating the foramen magnum from the palate, should reflect a more vertical habitual posture. When this part of the cranial base is long, the petrous portions of the temporal bones angle forward more strongly; a short cranial base corresponds to a more medial angle of these petrous portions.

    We may expect the cranial base to reflect posture in this way, but does it? Examine the species at this station. Can you distinguish the bipeds from the quadrupeds by using the cranial base? What about Ardipithecus: Where does it fit relative to these other species?

    Study questions: 
    1. How would you weigh evidence from different parts of the skeleton, in deciding whether Ardipithecus belongs on the human lineage?
  • The feet of Australopithecus afarensis

    Wed, 2011-09-07 11:57 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    Early hominins had feet that were adapted to a humanlike pattern of bipedality

    The australopithecines were several species of human relatives that lived in Africa between 5 million and 1.5 million years ago. One of the best-represented species of australopithecines is Australopithecus afarensis, which is known from Ethiopia and Kenya between 3.9 million and 3 million years ago. Although it is not the earliest hominin species, A. afarensis provides some of the earliest evidence about the evolution of bipedality in our lineage.

    Human feet are very different from ape feet. The differences are in the toes, the "arches" of the midfoot and the ankle.

    1. An ape foot bears an opposable big toe and they can grasp objects or branches with their feet. Humans have a stout big toe in line with the other toes, and our feet function as a stiff lever that lets us "toe off" powerfully into our next step. The rest of the toes are long and curving in apes, relatively short in humans.

    2. Ape feet are relatively flat and flexible in the middle section of the foot, letting them conform (and sometimes grip around) the surface they are on. Human feet have strong ligaments and bones packed into arch structures, both along the length of the foot (the longitudinal arch) and across the foot from side-to-side (the transverse arch).

    3. Apes have ankle joints that can flex upward (dorsiflex) more than human ankles, allowing them to climb more effectively on vertical tree trunks. Humans are more limited in this movement and have ankles that are directed more toward front-to-back movement with less side-to-side mobility.

    Paleoanthropologists have found evidence about the feet of A. afarensis from fossil footprint tracks, at a place called Laetoli, Tanzania. These footprints are nearly 3.7 million years old, and were uncovered by Mary Leakey during the late 1970's.

    View Larger Map

    The marker shows the location of the Laetoli footprint trail, in Tanzania. Laetoli is just south of Olduvai Gorge and west of the Ngorongoro crater.

    The footprint trackways are preserved in a series of overlapping surfaces that are the result of falls of volcanic ash, very quickly cemented by rainfall. These layers preserve the footprints of many kinds of animals, including ancient horses, birds and hominids. The best preserved hominin footprints are in trail G, representing two hominids walking in a straight line for a distance of about five meters.

    The Laetoli footprints are strikingly human-like, suggesting that these early hominins had feet that were functionally equivalent to ours. The imprints of the toes show that the big toe of A. afarensis was in line with the others. The big toe did not jut out from the foot as these creatures walked, it would have helped "toe off" each successive step. Many of the prints show that the feet were arched, which suggests an anatomy similar to the human anatomy in which the midfoot functions as a lever (White 1980; White and Suwa 1987).

    The paths have short spaces between successive prints, indicating a slow walking speed. One of the tracks is substantially smaller than the other, and since the two individuals matched each other stride-for-stride, it is likely that the smaller individual set the pace, with the larger one following (Leakey and Hay 1979). The larger track appears to preserve the footprints of at least two individuals, one literally following in the footsteps of the other.

    Fossil foot bones from A. afarensis add detail to what we've learned from the Laetoli footprint trails. For example, Carol Ward, Bill Kimbel and Don Johanson [1] described one of the bones of the midfoot from Hadar, Ethiopia, that represents A. afarensis. This bone, the fourth metatarsal, is the one that connects the fourth toe to the bones of the ankle. In humans, these ankle bones are higher, and transfer the body's weight downward into the arching midfoot. So the fourth metatarsal has to be slightly twisted as it arches down toward the lateral (outside) side of the foot. A chimpanzee's foot is much flatter, so the bone doesn't twist. Ward and colleagues found that the A. afarensis bone was twisted in a humanlike way.

    Hadar is the place where one of the most famous skeletons in the world was found: the "Lucy" skeleton, discovered by Don Johanson in 1974. Lucy presents evidence across much of her skeleton for a humanlike manner of walking. Jeremy DeSilva and Zach Throckmorton [2] looked at the tibia (shin bone) of this skeleton, along with other fossil tibiae of A. afarensis, to try to determine whether their ankle bones were structured to create a rearfoot arch like humans. What they found was interesting: Most A. afarensis tibiae met the ankle in a humanlike orientation, but they varied. Lucy's ankle in particular looked like her feet were relatively flatter. Just as human feet vary in their shape, this early species of hominins varied as well.

    Ape feet are made for climbing. Their flexibility allows the sole of the foot to conform to a tree trunk or branch, giving them more friction and a stronger grip. Ape ankle joints allow them to walk up a trunk while holding it with their arms, which means their feet need to carry weight while they are flexed upward and tilted to the side. Humans who are good climbers tend to shimmy up a tree by gripping the trunk tightly between their legs. Our feet just don't work very well when climbing a truly vertical surface. Rock climbers look for footholds where they can place their feet; loggers can use metal spikes clamped to their boots.

    What about A. afarensis? Jeremy DeSilva [3] examined the ankle joints preserved for this species and found that they did not have the orientation that chimpanzee ankles do. Where chimpanzees can bear weight effectively with their feet tilted to the side, for A. afarensis this orientation just wouldn't have worked. If these early hominins needed to climb trees — which might explain the powerful arm bones of some individuals — they must have done it in a different way than chimpanzees and other apes.

    Yet, the feet of A. afarensis were not entirely like ours. One major difference is that their toe bones were curved more than ours (Stern and Susman 1983). This curvature is less than the great curvature of the foot bones in chimpanzees, and may be correlated to the relatively long length of australopithecine toes compared to body size. Or, curved bones may just be a retention from their ape ancestry that hadn't been eliminated because it didn't impede walking. The curvature of the bones and a few other apelike features of the A. afarensis foot show that human feet did not instantly evolve in one moment of our evolution. Instead, human feet represent a long evolutionary history with different steps at different times.


    References

    Study questions: 
    1. Can you think of other ways that the bones of the feet may reflect behavior?
    2. What are the main differences between human feet and ape feet?
    3. Take some slow footsteps to see how the foot transfers weight during each step. Is your foot rigid like a lever moving the body, or is it soft and pliable?
  • Laboratory: Footprints and femora

    Sun, 2011-09-04 23:17 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    Collection of laboratory exercises centered around bipedality and the hindlimb.

    The stations in this lab will introduce one of the best-known species of fossil hominins, evidence of bipedal locomotion early in our evolution, some basic anthropometric measurements, and the anatomy of the femur.

    Walking upright is a basic feature of humanity, which sets our family apart from other primates. Our way of walking is supported by many changes in our skeletons, especially the legs and feet. Some features are such distinctive evidence of bipedality that finding only a fragment of a fossil bone that preserves them is enough to show the fossil is one of our relatives.

    Goals

    1. Measure your own stature along with some other dimensions of your body. This is a graded exercise.
    2. Learn the basic anatomy of the femur and practice determining right versus left femora.
    3. Create and examine footprints, comparing them with casts of the Laetoli hominin footprints.
    4. Encounter casts of the skeletal remains of Australopithecus robustus. See how the valgus angle of the distal femur is an indication of bipedality in this early hominin species.
  • The Laetoli footprints

    Fri, 2011-09-02 00:53 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    A lab exercise in making footprints to compare to the Laetoli G footprint track.

    The most striking piece of evidence for bipedality in our earliest hominin relatives is a series of footprint trails at Laetoli, a fossil-bearing site in Tanzania. The longest trail, known as trail G, was made by at least two individuals, one much larger than the other. These individuals were probably members of a species called Australopithecus afarensis, with fossil remains that have been found in other parts of the Laetoli area from nearly the same time, 3.5 million years ago. This species lived long before any that scientists call humans, they are different from us in many, many respects. But the evidence shows that they walked bipedally in a very humanlike way.

    Studying these footprints poses many challenges to scientists. Their shape should give us clues about the shape of the feet, the way they struck the ground, the length and pattern of steps. Probably the most obvious aspect of these footprints are the big toes, which were aligned more or less with the other toes. This is a very different shape than a chimpanzee or gorilla foot, in which the big toe is relatively short and diverges from the foot, and the other toes are long and curving. Nevertheless, the toes of A. afarensis were not quite the same as ours, as you can compare as you make your own footprints.

    A comparison of one of the Laetoli footprints (bottom) with a footprint from a later site attributed two modern humans (top and middle). The human (middle) is walking with a bent-knee, bent-hip (BKBH) gait, not a normal gait for a person. The image shows the depth of different parts of the print. From a research paper by David Raichlen and colleagues [1].

    This lab station has you making footprints, to see how you might study the shape and conditions under which the Laetoli footprints were made. As you make footprints, try to use different styles of gait. Move fast or slow, maybe try to simulate a running step. Can you rule out some patterns of movement for the makers of the Laetoli footprint trail?


    References

    Study questions: 
    1. What kind of locomotion can you imagine would be intermediate between human-like bipedality and ape-like quadrupedality?
    2. One of the main points of contention about the Laetoli footprints is whether they preserve human-like arches in the midfoot. What do your comparisons indicate?
  • Ardipithecus challenge explication: the pelvis

    Tue, 2010-06-01 16:38 -- John Hawks

    The other day, I started writing about the Sarmiento-White exchange on Ardipithecus, by describing how they disagree about the implications of the molecular clock.

    What really prompted me to break up my discussion into three posts was that it takes quite a lot of space to explicate the features of the pelvis. I've taken care to reference the description by Lovejoy and colleagues (2009c), the general discussion of Ardi's locomotor anatomy in Lovejoy et al. (2009a, 2009b), and the discussion of early hominin pelvic evolution by Lovejoy and colleagues (1999).

    I have a major hesitation that keeps me from writing anything about the Ardipithecus pelvis beyond those descriptions: Independent investigators at present cannot verify or replicate any comparisons made in Lovejoy and colleagues' analyses. Most of the measurements and many quantitative observations depend on a 3-d model. That model is not available for inspection, and the published description does not provide enough detail about the model to independently assess its accuracy. Worse, as I discussed last fall, the model appears to have been derived from the a priori expectations about pelvis evolution that Lovejoy and colleagues published in 1999.

    As a result, I don't think any independent reader, including me, can tell how much of the model is real.

    Given my problems understanding their pelvis 3-d model, I've decided to limit myself to the narrow points considered by Sarmiento's (2010) comment and White and colleagues' (2010) reply. Lovejoy and colleagues (2009b, 2009c) claimed that most of the pelvic anatomy of Ardipithecus is primitive for great apes, and that many of the pelvic features shared by chimpanzees and gorillas evolved in parallel in those two lineages. But they listed a few features that they considered to be derived in Ardipithecus and shared with Australopithecus. Sarmiento lists these, together with two features of the foot, and argues that they are not compelling evidence that Ardipithecus is a cladistic hominin:

    Of the remaining characters listed as common to Ardipithecus and Australopithecus, none of the eight postcranial characters (sagittal iliac/isthmus orientation, slightly broadened iliac breadth, strong anterior inferior iliac spine formed by separate ossification center, robust second metatarsal base and shaft, dorsally domed second to fifth metatarsal heads, upwardly canted proximal foot phalanges, and short iliac isthmus and pubic symphysis outline), nor the other four craniodental characters [anterior basion position (14), advanced cranial flexion, and broad lower molars and mandibular corpus] are shown by systematic comparisons to be exclusive to humans or share-derived with humans. Nearly all are quantitative characters that appear in early hominoids (i.e., Oreopithecus and Dryopithecus) and have appeared independently in other primate lineages, and character simplicity is such that parallelisms or reversals in polarity cannot be demonstrated (12, 15).

    I think Sarmiento's argument is entirely reasonable. Lovejoy and colleagues (2009a, 2009b) claimed a long series of parallelisms between chimpanzees and gorillas. Despite some reservations, I tend to agree -- Ardipithecus is primitive in its postcranial anatomy, and living apes are convergently derived. But take the argument to its logical end, and it becomes Sarmiento's. Ardi shares some postcranial features with hominins that living apes lack, but how do we know that any of them are derived? Or if they are derived, how do we know that they aren't trivially simple to evolve in parallel?

    In their published reply to Sarmento, White and colleagues do not mention the long series of great ape postcranial features that they previously argued to be cases of parallel evolution (Lovejoy et al. 2009b, 2009c). Instead, they claim that three features of the pelvis are so convincingly like Australopithecus that Ardi must be a hominin:

    Although isolated aspects of pelvic morphology of Oreopithecus may partially mimic those of Ar. ramidus [such as a projecting anterior inferior iliac spine (AIIS)], crucial postcranial elements of the latter (9, 10) are unambiguously derived toward the Australopithecus condition, to the exclusion of Oreopithecus. Some of these derivations probably stem from shared changes in pattern formation exhibited by both Ar. ramidus and Australopithecus. In the pelvis, these include (i) superoinferior approximation of the sacroiliac and acetabular joints by iliac isthmus shortening and (ii) a sagittally oriented and greatly broadened lower iliac isthmus accompanied by (iii) an exaggerated anterior margin, itself the product of a unique physis for the AIIS, shared only with phyletic hominids.

    I find this reply very strange. The "shared changes in pattern formation" hypothesis actually supports Sarmiento's argument. If White and colleagues are correct about the morphogenetic basis of the Ardipithecus pelvic anatomy, that makes it more likely to have evolved convergently with Australopithecus, not less likely. Lovejoy and colleagues (1999) emphasized this point -- the pelvic features of hominins were likely to have evolved due to selection for a shorter pelvis, principally for biomechanical reasons, with other characters of the pelvis and femur changing entirely due to their genetic correlation with this major target of selection.

    The reply omits the most persuasive of the derived features in hominins -- the short ilium -- which was at the center of Lovejoy and colleagues' (1999) account of hominin pelvic evolution. Here's a comparison of 3-d models:

    Ardi looks very obviously like the human and Lucy, and very different from the chimpanzee, right? But I think that the chimpanzee model in this picture is larger than it should be, as the acetabulum looks much larger than Ardi even though Lovejoy and colleagues (2009c) report Ardi's acetabulum as right in the middle of the chimpanzee range. Maybe they chose a large chimpanzee, or built the Ardi 3-d model using the smaller end of their range of possible acetabular diameter. You see the problem of using a model instead of the actual fossil?

    In any event, the differences between Ardi's os coxa and the chimpanzee's are obvious. Ardi has a much shorter ilium. The chimpanzee has an iliac blade that comes right out of the picture toward us, because it is oriented along a coronal axis. Ardi's angles forward, or anteriorly, like the hominins.

    In fact, if we look at the model in superior view superimposed on Lucy's pelvis, you can see that Ardi's iliac blades angle even more anteriorly than Lucy's:

    The three features White and colleagues (2010) list, as quoted above, are morphological side effects of the shorter, more sagitally angled ilia. Lovejoy and colleagues (1999) paper would likely have described these features as side effects of selection for a shorter pelvis with an anteriorly directed origin for the rectus femoris muscle.

    The question is: How much of the functional similarity between Ardi and hominins is homology, and how much is convergence? Similarity may not reflect homology -- descent of the feature from the same ancestor.

    That point is especially notable when White and colleagues (2010) discuss Oreopithecus -- an extinct ape whose pelvis shares some features with hominins, and other features with apes. Oreopithecus is not a hominin, but it may have had some adaptations to a bipedal stance. Yet it also shares features that Lovejoy and colleagues (2009b) have argued must have evolved convergently in orangutans, chimpanzees and gorillas. That seems like a real problem for the idea that Ardipithecus represents the primitive condition for such traits.

    Here's the Oreopithecus paragraph from White et al. (2010), the first time that Ardipithecus and Oreopithecus pelvic features have been compared (other than here on the blog):

    Indeed, Oreopithecus diverges from hominids remarkably in features ranging from limb proportions to dental anatomy. In the pelvis, it features bi-iliac entrapment of at least one lumbar vertebra and general immobilization of the lumbar column (including transformation of lumbar somites into its six-segment sacrum). Such changes stand in stark contrast to the six lumbar, four-segment sacrum of Au. afarensis, a character adumbrated by the precipitous reduction in iliac height (and extensive broadening) of the Ar. ramidus ilium (10). African apes have entirely rigidified lumbar columns that differ radically from those of hominids.

    I think this comparison is very important. Oreopithecus is not a member of the orangutan clade, and Lovejoy and colleagues' (2009b) scenario implies that if Oreopithecus is a member of the African ape clade, it -- like chimpanzees and gorillas -- must have evolved these features convergently.

    Can it be that orangutans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and Oreopithecus all acquired the distinctive "bi-iliac entrapment" of the lower lumbar vertebrae in four separate instances of evolutionary convergence? Put those together with the elongation of the arms, reduction in the length of the lumbar column, and sacralization of lumbar vertebrae. Far from a simple change, it a series of complicated, correlated changes. Lovejoy and colleagues (2009b) defended the hypothesis that these traits are parallelisms shared by all the lineages of living great apes. Now, White and colleagues (2010) are forced to posit a fourth independent evolution of many of these traits in Oreopithecus.

    Despite those similarities to living great apes, Oreopithecus shares with hominins the development of a relatively prominent anterior inferior iliac spine. This implies an adaptation to hip flexion or knee extension with a more extended leg. Bipedal stance is one possible explanation for this anatomy, and is the explanation that Lovejoy and colleagues (2009c) offer for its presence in Ardipithecus. White and colleagues (2010) include this as their feature (iii), the "unique physis for the AIIS, shared only with phyletic hominids." But this description seems exaggerated, when we consider what Lovejoy and colleagues (2009c:71e3) actually wrote:

    The form and size of the AIIS in ARA-VP- 6/500, as well as its projection anterior to the acetabular margin, indicate that this structure had already begun to appear and mature via a novel physis.

    A "novel physis" refers to a separate growth plate for the anterior inferior iliac spine. Ardi was an adult, and her pelvis was fully developed. So there's no observing whether the anterior inferior iliac spine had its own growth plate. Lovejoy and colleagues (2009c, 2010) are just claiming there must have been one. What basis could there be for such a model, other than an allometric analysis of the anterior inferior iliac spine in humans and other primates where it is present -- such as Oreopithecus? Remember that Ardi is more than twice the body size of Oreopithecus, yet Rook and colleagues (1999) showed that the cancellous structure within the anterior inferior iliac spine of Oreopithecus is a close match to Homo. That anatomical similarity may imply a common developmental pathway in Oreopithecus and hominins.

    Is the anterior inferior iliac spine homologous in Oreopithecus and Ardipithecus? If so, it is probably primitive for great apes, not derived in hominins. Does it have another functional role besides bipedal stance? If so, that functional role might well have occurred in Ardipithecus, another arboreal quadruped.

    Could other features of Ardi's pelvis be consequences of arboreal quadrupedal locomotion in an ape with a long lumbar spine? The sagittal orientation of the iliac blades and isthmus is not like living great apes, but it is like living Old World monkeys. Ardi's ilia are shorter than monkey ilia, but the question deserves some serious allometric study. Also deserving of study is whether isthmus orientation in monkeys matches that of the iliac blades, and if not, why not? One hypothesis would be the morphogenetic effects of selection for a shorter ilium length, the scenario published by Lovejoy and colleagues (1999).

    I don't think there's any question that the evolutionary scenario outlined by Lovejoy and colleagues (2009b) is highly non-parsimonious with respect to the postcrania. It requires the convergent evolution of a long suite of characters within all the living great apes in at least three separate evolutionary histories. Add in fossil apes -- at least Oreopithecus, and possibly Morotopithecus and Dryopithecus -- and the number of parallelisms is extreme. The chimpanzee-gorilla convergences go even further beyond those shared with orangutans to include the knuckle-walking features of the wrist and hand, and several dental characters.

    White and colleagues (2010), as I'll describe in the next post, argue that the shared dental characters of Ardipithecus and Australopithecus necessitate their close relationship. Once this is assumed, the many postcranial convergences become necessary. In that perspective, it helps to "soften the blow" somewhat by identifying those postcranial features shared by Ardipithecus and the hominins.

    From the perspective of the pelvis, I'll return to one feature of Ardipithecus that seems independent, shared with hominins, and lacking in Oreopithecus: the "precipitous reduction in iliac height," so obvious in the picture above. But Ardi's os coxa is badly crushed at the superior border of the ilium. My post from last fall includes photos of both Ardi's os coxa and the pelvis of Oreopithecus. Ardi's is relatively shorter, no question, and it lacks the great height on its medial aspect, that creates the "entrapment" of the last lumbar vertebra of Oreopithecus. But the crushing seems to obscure this anatomy, so that it's not possible to be sure from the photos.

    I wish we had better than a cartoon model to compare. During the seven months since I first detailed what I see as weak points in the pelvic description, I've become less and less persuaded that the pelvic features reflect any hominin-like locomotor adaptations in Ardipithecus. There are many unresolved functional issues, which obscure the phylogenetic relations between living and fossil apes. Ardi makes every tree less parsimonious, no matter which branch we put her on. Shoe-horning her into the hominins doesn't solve many problems, and creates some intractable ones.

    I find myself calling her an ape.

    References:

       Abitbol MM. 1995. Reconstruction of the sts 14 (Australopithecus africanus) pelvis. Am J Phys Anthropol 96:143–158.

       Harrison T. 1986. A reassessment of the phylogenetic relationships of Oreopithecus bambolii. J Hum Evol 15:541–584.

       Harrison T. 1991. The implications of Oreopithecus bambolii for the origins of bipedalism. In: Coppens Y, Senut B, editors, Origine(s) de la bipédie chez les hominidés, Cahiers de Paléoanthropologie. Paris: Editions du CNRS. p 235–244.

       Köhler M, Moyà-Solà S. 1997. Ape-like or hominid-like? the positional behavior of Oreopithecus bambolii reconsidered. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 94:11,747–11,750.

       Lovejoy CO, Cohn MJ, White TD. 1999. Morphological analysis of the mammalian postcranium: A developmental perspective. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96:13,247–13,252.

       Lovejoy CO, Simpson SW, White TD, Asfaw B, Suwa G. 2009a. Careful climbing in the Miocene: The forelimbs of Ardipithecus ramidus and humans are primitive. Science 326:70e1–70e7.

       Lovejoy CO, Suwa G, Simpson SW, Matternes JH, White TD. 2009b. The great divides: Ardipithecus ramidus reveals the postcrania of our last common ancestors with African apes. Science 326:100–106.

       Lovejoy CO, Suwa G, Spurlock L, Asfaw B, White TD. 2009c. The pelvis and femur of Ardipithecus ramidus: The emergence of upright walking. Science 326.

       Robinson JT. 1964. Adaptive radiation in the australopithecines and the origin of man. In: Howell FC, Bourlière F, editors, African ecology and human evolution. London: Methuen and Company, Limited. p 385–416.

       Rook L, Bondioli L, Köhler M, Moyà-Solà S, Macchiarelli R. 1999. Oreopithecus was a bipedal ape after all: Evidence from the iliac cancellous architecture. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96:8795–8799.

    Sarich VM. 1971. A molecular approach to the question of human origins. In (P. Dohlinow & V.M. Sarich, Eds.) Background for Man: Readings in Physical Anthropology, pp. 60‐81. Boston: Little, Brown.

    Sarmiento EE. 2010. Comment on the paleobiology and classification of Ardipithecus ramidus. Science 328:1105. doi:10.1126/science.1184148

       White TD, Asfaw B, Beyene Y, Haile-Selassie Y, Lovejoy CO, Suwa G, WoldeGabriel G. 2009. Ardipithecus ramidus and the paleobiology of early hominids. Science 326:75–86.

    White TD, Suwa G, Lovejoy CO. 2010. Response to Comment on the paleobiology and classification of Ardipithecus ramidus. Science 328:1105. doi:10.1126/science.1185462

    Synopsis: 
    Tim White and Esteban Sarmiento face off in Science about Ardipithecus. I try to explain.
  • Running commentary

    Tue, 2009-10-27 22:30 -- John Hawks

    Tara Parker-Pope picks up the "endurance running" hypothesis:

    The scientific evidence supports the notion that humans evolved to be runners. In a 2007 paper in the journal Sports Medicine, Daniel E. Lieberman, a Harvard evolutionary biologist, and Dennis M. Bramble, a biologist at the University of Utah, wrote that several characteristics unique to humans suggested endurance running played an important role in our evolution.

    Most mammals can sprint faster than humans — having four legs gives them the advantage. But when it comes to long distances, humans can outrun almost any animal. Because we cool by sweating rather than panting, we can stay cool at speeds and distances that would overheat other animals. On a hot day, the two scientists wrote, a human could even outrun a horse in a 26.2-mile marathon.

    I wish she'd have interviewed some skeptics. As it is, the article is basically a sales flyer for Christopher McDougall's book, Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen. I don't see anything wrong with an article that falls on the side of the running idea, but I'd like to see some cogent criticism -- it's definitely a minority viewpoint.

    There is this:

    So if we’re born to run, why are runners so often injured?

    Good question. Improper training (the answer in the article) is not a good evolutionary answer. It's almost as if people weren't built to take this kind of punishment...

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Neandertals

For years, I've worked on their bones. Now I'm working on their genes. Read more about the science studying these ancient people.

Denisova

From a finger bone of an ancient human came the record of a completely unexpected population. My lab is working on the science of the Denisova genome.

Acceleration

The advent of agriculture caused natural selection to speed up greatly in humans. We're uncovering some of the ways that populations have rapidly changed during the last 10,000 years.

Malapa

Just outside Johannesburg, the Malapa site is producing some of the most exciting finds in human evolution. This site is the headquarters of the Malapa Soft Tissue Project.