García-Martínez Daniel, Bastir Markus, Huguet Rosa, Estalrrich Almudena, García-Tabernero Antonio, Ríos Luis, Cunha Eugenia, Rasilla Marco de la, Rosas Antonio
Paleoanthropology Group, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), J. G. Abascal 2, 28006, Madrid, Spain; Biology Department, Faculty of Sciences, Universidad Autónoma De Madrid, Darwin 2, 28049, Madrid, Spain.
Paleoanthropology Group, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), J. G. Abascal 2, 28006, Madrid, Spain.
J Hum Evol. 2017 Oct;111:85-101. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2017.06.003. Epub 2017 Aug 3.
The study of the Neanderthal thorax has attracted the attention of the scientific community for more than a century. It is agreed that Neanderthals have a more capacious thorax than modern humans, but whether this was caused by a medio-lateral or an antero-posterior expansion of the thorax is still debated, and is key to understanding breathing biomechanics and body shape in Neanderthals. The fragile nature of ribs, the metameric structure of the thorax and difficulties in quantifying thorax morphology all contribute to uncertainty regarding precise aspects of Neanderthal thoracic shape. The El Sidrón site has yielded costal remains from the upper to the lower thorax, as well as several proximal rib ends (frequently missing in the Neanderthal record), which help to shed light on Neanderthal thorax shape. We compared the El Sidrón costal elements with ribs from recent modern humans as well as with fossil modern humans and other Neanderthals through traditional morphometric methods and 3D geometric morphometrics, combined with missing data estimation and virtual reconstruction (at the 1st, 5th and 11th costal levels). Our results show that Neanderthals have larger rib heads and articular tubercles than their modern human counterparts. Neanderthal 1st ribs are smaller than in modern humans, whereas 5th and 11th ribs are considerably larger. When we articulated mean ribs (size and shape) with their corresponding vertebral elements, we observed that compared to modern humans the Neanderthal thorax is medio-laterally expanded at every level, especially at T5 and T11. Therefore, in the light of evidence from the El Sidrón costal remains, we hypothesize that the volumetric expansion of the Neanderthal thorax proposed by previous authors would mainly be produced by a medio-lateral expansion of the thorax.
一个多世纪以来,对尼安德特人胸廓的研究一直吸引着科学界的关注。人们普遍认为,尼安德特人的胸廓比现代人类更宽大,但这种情况是由胸廓的左右扩张还是前后扩张引起的,仍存在争议,而这是理解尼安德特人呼吸生物力学和体型的关键。肋骨的脆弱性、胸廓的分节结构以及量化胸廓形态的困难,都导致了关于尼安德特人胸廓形状精确细节的不确定性。埃尔西多龙遗址出土了从胸廓上部到下部的肋骨遗迹,以及几个近端肋骨末端(在尼安德特人记录中经常缺失),这有助于揭示尼安德特人的胸廓形状。我们通过传统形态测量方法和三维几何形态测量学,结合缺失数据估计和虚拟重建(在第1、5和11肋水平),将埃尔西多龙的肋骨元素与近代现代人类以及化石现代人类和其他尼安德特人的肋骨进行了比较。我们的结果表明,尼安德特人的肋头和关节结节比现代人类的更大。尼安德特人的第一肋骨比现代人类的小,而第五和第十一肋骨则大得多。当我们将平均肋骨(尺寸和形状)与相应的椎骨元素连接起来时,我们观察到,与现代人类相比,尼安德特人的胸廓在每个水平上都向左右扩张,尤其是在T5和T11水平。因此,根据埃尔西多龙肋骨遗迹的证据,我们假设先前作者提出的尼安德特人胸廓的容积扩张主要是由胸廓的左右扩张产生的。