Hatala Kevin G, Demes Brigitte, Richmond Brian G
Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, Department of Anthropology, The George Washington University, 800 22nd Street NW, Suite 6000, Washington, DC 20052, USA
Department of Anatomical Sciences, Health Sciences Center, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2016 Aug 17;283(1836). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2016.0235.
Bipedalism is a key adaptation that shaped human evolution, yet the timing and nature of its evolution remain unclear. Here we use new experimentally based approaches to investigate the locomotor mechanics preserved by the famous Pliocene hominin footprints from Laetoli, Tanzania. We conducted footprint formation experiments with habitually barefoot humans and with chimpanzees to quantitatively compare their footprints to those preserved at Laetoli. Our results show that the Laetoli footprints are morphologically distinct from those of both chimpanzees and habitually barefoot modern humans. By analysing biomechanical data that were collected during the human experiments we, for the first time, directly link differences between the Laetoli and modern human footprints to specific biomechanical variables. We find that the Laetoli hominin probably used a more flexed limb posture at foot strike than modern humans when walking bipedally. The Laetoli footprints provide a clear snapshot of an early hominin bipedal gait that probably involved a limb posture that was slightly but significantly different from our own, and these data support the hypothesis that important evolutionary changes to hominin bipedalism occurred within the past 3.66 Myr.
两足行走是塑造人类进化的关键适应性特征,但其进化的时间和本质仍不清楚。在此,我们运用基于实验的新方法,研究坦桑尼亚莱托利著名的上新世古人类足迹所保留的运动力学特征。我们对习惯赤脚的人类和黑猩猩进行了足迹形成实验,以便将它们的足迹与莱托利保存的足迹进行定量比较。我们的结果表明,莱托利足迹在形态上与黑猩猩和习惯赤脚的现代人类的足迹都不同。通过分析在人类实验过程中收集的生物力学数据,我们首次将莱托利足迹与现代人类足迹之间的差异直接与特定的生物力学变量联系起来。我们发现,莱托利古人类在两足行走时,着地瞬间可能比现代人类使用更弯曲的肢体姿势。莱托利足迹清晰地呈现了早期古人类两足行走步态的情况,这种步态可能涉及一种与我们自己的步态略有但显著不同的肢体姿势,这些数据支持了这样一种假说,即古人类两足行走的重要进化变化发生在过去366万年之内。