Department of Anthropology, Washington University, Saint Louis, MO 63130, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2012 Oct;149(2):312-7. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22118. Epub 2012 Jul 24.
The distal half of a right human humerus (E.898), recovered ex situ in 1925 by Hrdlička at the Broken Hill Mine, Kabwe, Zambia, has figured prominently in assessments of Middle Pleistocene Homo postcranial variation and of the phylogenetic polarity and functional anatomy of Pleistocene Homo upper limb morphology. Reassessment of distal humeral features that distinguish modern human and some archaic Homo humeri, especially relative olecranon breadth and medial and lateral pillar thicknesses, confirm previous studies placing it morphologically close to recent humans, as well as possibly to Early Pleistocene Homo. However, it completely lacks stratigraphic context, and there is faunal and archeological evidence for human activity at Broken Hill from the Middle Pleistocene to the Holocene. Given its uncertain geological age and modern human morphology, the Broken Hill E.898 humerus should not be used in analyses of Pleistocene humans until it is securely dated.
右肱骨远段(E.898),1925 年由 Hrdlička 在赞比亚卡布韦的布罗肯山矿采集到,其保存状态为原地埋藏。它在评估中更新世人类后肢骨骼变异、更新世人类上肢形态的系统发育极性和功能解剖学方面发挥了重要作用。对区分现代人及部分古人类肱骨的肱骨远段特征(尤其是相对鹰嘴宽度及内外侧柱厚度)的重新评估,证实了之前将其形态上与现代人,以及可能与早更新世人类接近的研究结果。然而,它完全缺乏地层背景,而且有动物群和考古学证据表明,从更新世中期到全新世,布罗肯山都有人类活动。由于其地质年代不确定且具有现代人形态, Broken Hill E.898 肱骨在其年代确定之前不应被用于分析更新世人类。