Williams-Hatala E M, Hatala K G, Hiles S, Rabey K N
Department of Biology, Chatham University, Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA.
Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, The George Washington University, 800 22nd St., NW, Suite 6000, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
Sci Rep. 2016 Jun 23;6:28353. doi: 10.1038/srep28353.
Muscle attachment sites (entheses) on dry bones are regularly used by paleontologists to infer soft tissue anatomy and to reconstruct behaviors of extinct organisms. This method is commonly applied to fossil hominin hand bones to assess their abilities to participate in Paleolithic stone tool behaviors. Little is known, however, about how or even whether muscle anatomy and activity regimes influence the morphologies of their entheses, especially in the hand. Using the opponens muscles from a sample of modern humans, we tested the hypothesis that aspects of hand muscle architecture that are known to be influenced by behavior correlate with the size and shape of their associated entheses. Results show no consistent relationships between these behaviorally-influenced aspects of muscle architecture and entheseal morphology. Consequently, it is likely premature to infer patterns of behavior, such as stone tool making in fossil hominins, from these same entheses.
古生物学家经常利用干燥骨骼上的肌肉附着点(起止点)来推断软组织解剖结构,并重建已灭绝生物的行为。这种方法通常应用于化石人类手部骨骼,以评估它们参与旧石器时代石器行为的能力。然而,对于肌肉解剖结构和活动方式如何影响甚至是否会影响其起止点的形态,尤其是在手部,我们知之甚少。我们以现代人类样本中的对掌肌为研究对象,检验了以下假设:已知受行为影响手部肌肉结构方面,与其相关起止点的大小和形状存在关联。结果表明,肌肉结构中这些受行为影响的方面与起止点形态之间不存在一致的关系。因此,从这些相同的起止点推断行为模式,比如化石人类制造石器的行为模式,可能为时过早。