Richmond Brian G, Aiello Leslie C, Wood Bernard A
Department of Anthropology, George Washington University, 2110 G St, NW, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2002 Oct;43(4):529-48.
Recent analyses and new fossil discoveries suggest that the evolution of hominin limb length proportions is complex, with evolutionary reversals and a decoupling of proportions within and between limbs. This study takes into account intraspecific variation to test whether or not the limb proportions of four early hominin associated skeletons (AL 288-1, OH 62, BOU-VP-12/1, and KNM-WT 15000) can be considered to be significantly different from one another. Exact randomization methods were used to compare the differences between pairs of fossil skeletons to the differences observed between all possible pairs of individuals within large samples of Gorilla gorilla, Pan troglodytes, Pongo pygmaeus, and Homo sapiens. Although the difference in humerofemoral proportions between OH 62 and AL 288-1 does not exceed variation in the extant samples, it is rare. When humerofemoral midshaft circumferences are compared, the difference between OH 62 and AL 288-1 is fairly common in extant species. This, in combination with error associated with the limb lengths estimates, suggests that it may be premature to consider H. (or Australopithecus) habilis as having more apelike limb proportions than those in A. afarensis. The humerofemoral index of BOU-VP-12/1 differs significantly from both OH 62 and AL 288-1, but not from KNM-WT 15000. Published length estimates, if correct, suggest that the relative forearm length of BOU-VP-12/1 is unique among hominins, exceeding those of the African apes and resembling the proportions in Pongo. Evidence that A. afarensis exhibited a less apelike upper:lower limb design than A. africanus (and possibly H. habilis) suggests that, if A. afarensis is broadly ancestral to A. africanus, the latter did not simply inherit primitive morphology associated with arboreality, but is derived in this regard. The fact that the limb proportions of OH 62 (and possibly KNM-ER 3735) are no more human like than those of AL 288-1 underscores the primitive body design of H. habilis.
近期的分析和新的化石发现表明,古人类肢体长度比例的演化是复杂的,存在演化逆转以及肢体内部和之间比例的解耦。本研究考虑了种内变异,以测试四个早期古人类相关骨骼(AL 288-1、OH 62、BOU-VP-12/1和KNM-WT 15000)的肢体比例是否可被认为彼此存在显著差异。使用精确随机化方法将化石骨骼对之间的差异与在大猩猩、黑猩猩、红毛猩猩和智人大样本中所有可能个体对之间观察到的差异进行比较。尽管OH 62和AL 288-1之间的肱股比例差异未超过现存样本的变异范围,但这种情况很罕见。当比较肱股中轴周长时,OH 62和AL 288-1之间的差异在现存物种中相当常见。这与肢体长度估计相关的误差相结合,表明认为能人(或南方古猿)的肢体比例比阿法南方古猿更像猿可能为时过早。BOU-VP-12/1的肱股指数与OH 62和AL 288-1均有显著差异,但与KNM-WT 15000无显著差异。已发表的长度估计(如果正确)表明,BOU-VP-12/1的相对前臂长度在古人类中是独特的,超过了非洲猿类,且与红毛猩猩的比例相似。有证据表明,阿法南方古猿的上肢与下肢设计比非洲南方古猿(以及可能的能人)更不像猿,这表明,如果阿法南方古猿是非洲南方古猿的广义祖先,那么后者并非简单地继承了与树栖性相关的原始形态,而是在这方面有所衍生。OH 62(以及可能的KNM-ER 3735)的肢体比例并不比AL 288-1更像人类,这一事实凸显了能人原始的身体设计。