Susman R L
Department of Anatomical Sciences, School of Medicine, State University of New York, Stony Brook 11794-8081.
Science. 1988 May 6;240(4853):781-4. doi: 10.1126/science.3129783.
New hand fossils from Swartkrans (dated at about 1.8 million years ago) indicate that the hand of Paranthropus robustus was adapted for precision grasping. Functional morphology suggests that Paranthropus could have used tools, possibly for plant procurement and processing. The new fossils further suggest that absence of tool behavior was not responsible for the demise of the "robust" lineage. Conversely, these new fossils indicate that the acquisition of tool behavior does not account for the emergence and success of early Homo.
来自斯瓦特克朗斯的新手化石(年代约为180万年前)表明,粗壮傍人的手适合精确抓握。功能形态学表明,粗壮傍人可能已经使用工具,可能用于获取和加工植物。这些新化石进一步表明,工具行为的缺失并非“粗壮”谱系灭绝的原因。相反,这些新化石表明,工具行为的获得并不能解释早期人类的出现和成功。