Bastir Markus, García Martínez Daniel, Rios Luis, Higuero Antonio, Barash Alon, Martelli Sandra, García Tabernero Antonio, Estalrrich Almudena, Huguet Rosa, de la Rasilla Marco, Rosas Antonio
Paleoanthropology Group, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), J. G. Abascal 2, 28006, Madrid, Spain.
Paleoanthropology Group, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), J. G. Abascal 2, 28006, Madrid, Spain.
J Hum Evol. 2017 Jul;108:47-61. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2017.03.008. Epub 2017 May 5.
Well preserved thoracic vertebrae of Neandertals are rare. However, such fossils are important as their three-dimensional (3D) spatial configuration can contribute to the understanding of the size and shape of the thoracic spine and the entire thorax. This is because the vertebral body and transverse processes provide the articulation and attachment sites for the ribs. Dorsal orientation of the transverse processes relative to the vertebral body also rotates the attached ribs in a way that could affect thorax width. Previous research indicates possible evidence for greater dorsal orientation of the transverse processes and small vertebral body heights in Neandertals, but their 3D vertebral structure has not yet been addressed. Here we present 15 new vertebral remains from the El Sidrón Neandertals (Asturias, Northern Spain) and used 3D geometric morphometrics to address the above issues by comparing two particularly well preserved El Sidrón remains (SD-1619, SD-1641) with thoracic vertebrae from other Neandertals and a sample of anatomically modern humans. Centroid sizes of El Sidrón vertebrae are within the human range. Neandertals have larger T1 and probably also T2. The El Sidrón vertebrae are similar in 3D shape to those of other Neandertals, which differ from Homo sapiens particularly in central-lower regions (T6-T10) of the thoracic spine. Differences include more dorsally and cranially oriented transverse processes, less caudally oriented spinous processes, and vertebral bodies that are anteroposteriorly and craniocaudally short. The results fit with current reconstructions of Neandertal thorax morphology.
保存完好的尼安德特人胸椎化石十分罕见。然而,这类化石很重要,因为其三维空间结构有助于了解胸椎及整个胸廓的大小和形状。这是由于椎体和横突为肋骨提供了关节连接和附着位点。横突相对于椎体的背侧方向也会使附着的肋骨发生旋转,进而可能影响胸廓宽度。此前的研究表明,有证据显示尼安德特人的横突背侧方向可能更大,椎体高度较小,但他们的三维椎体结构尚未得到研究。在此,我们展示了来自西班牙北部阿斯图里亚斯地区埃尔西多龙洞穴尼安德特人的15块新的椎骨化石,并使用三维几何形态测量学方法,通过将埃尔西多龙洞穴两块保存特别完好的化石(SD - 1619、SD - 1641)与其他尼安德特人的胸椎以及一组解剖学意义上的现代人类胸椎进行比较,来解决上述问题。埃尔西多龙洞穴椎骨的质心大小在人类范围内。尼安德特人的第一胸椎(T1)较大,可能第二胸椎(T2)也较大。埃尔西多龙洞穴的椎骨在三维形状上与其他尼安德特人的椎骨相似,与智人的椎骨不同,尤其是在胸椎中下部区域(T6 - T10)。差异包括横突更偏向背侧和头侧,棘突更不偏向尾侧,以及椎体在前后方向和头尾方向上较短。这些结果与目前对尼安德特人胸廓形态的重建结果相符。