Department of Anatomy, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa; Computer-assisted Palaeoanthropology Team, UMR 5288 CNRS-Université Paul-Sabatier, Toulouse, France; Department of Anatomy and Histology, Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University, Ga-Rankuwa, Pretoria, South Africa.
Computer-assisted Palaeoanthropology Team, UMR 5288 CNRS-Université Paul-Sabatier, Toulouse, France; Evolutionary Studies Institute and School of Geosciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
J Hum Evol. 2019 Oct;135:102666. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2019.102666. Epub 2019 Sep 6.
Studies of the australopith (Australopithecus and Paranthropus) proximal femur have increasingly integrated information from the local arrangement of the cortical and cancellous bone to allow functional-biomechanical inferences on the locomotor behavioral patterns. In Australopithecus africanus and Paranthropus robustus, the cancellous bone organization at the center of the femoral head shows principal strut orientation similar to that of fossil and recent humans, which indicates that australopiths were human-like in many aspects of their bipedalism. However, by combining outer morphology with superoinferior asymmetry in cortical bone thickness at the base of neck and mid-neck, it has been suggested that, while adapted for terrestrial bipedality, australopiths displayed a slightly altered gait kinematics compared to Homo. We used techniques of 2D and 3D virtual imaging applied to an X-ray microtomographic record to assess cortical bone distribution along the entire femoral neck compartment in four upper femora from Swartkrans, South Africa (SK 82, SK 97, SK 3121, and SWT1/LB-2) and compared the results to the extant human and chimpanzee conditions. Our results support and extend previous evidence for more symmetric superior and inferior femoral neck cortical thicknesses in P. robustus than in modern humans and show that the differences are even greater than previously reported. However, P. robustus and humans still share a trend of lateral-to-medial decrease in asymmetry of the superior/inferior cortical thickness ratio, while this pattern is reversed in chimpanzees. We also identified two features uniquely characterizing P. robustus: an accentuated contrast between the relatively thicker anterior and the thinner posterior walls, and a more marked lateral-to-medial thinning of both cortices compared to extant humans and chimpanzees, which indicate wider interspecific differences among hominids in structural organization of the proximal femur than previously reported. It remains to be ascertained if, and to what extent, these features also characterize the femoral neck of Australopithecus.
对南方古猿(南方古猿属和傍人属)股骨近端的研究越来越多地整合了皮质骨和松质骨的局部排列信息,以便对其两足运动行为模式进行功能生物力学推断。在南非粗壮南方古猿和粗壮傍人属中,股骨头中心的松质骨组织表现出与化石和现代人类相似的主要支柱方向,这表明南方古猿在其两足行走的许多方面与人类相似。然而,通过结合外形态和颈基部和中颈部皮质骨厚度的上下不对称,有人认为,尽管适应了陆地两足行走,但与人类相比,南方古猿的步态运动学略有改变。我们使用二维和三维虚拟成像技术,对来自南非斯瓦特克朗斯(Swartkrans)的四个股骨近端的 X 射线微断层扫描记录进行评估,以评估整个股骨颈区的皮质骨分布,这四个股骨分别是 SK 82、SK 97、SK 3121 和 SWT1/LB-2,并将结果与现生人类和黑猩猩的情况进行比较。我们的结果支持并扩展了先前的证据,表明粗壮傍人属的股骨颈上部和下部皮质骨厚度比现代人类更对称,并表明差异比以前报道的更大。然而,粗壮傍人属和人类仍然具有一个优势:从外侧到内侧,优势/劣势皮质厚度比的不对称性逐渐减少,而这种模式在黑猩猩中则相反。我们还确定了两个独特的特征,这些特征特征唯一地描述了粗壮傍人属:相对较厚的前壁和较薄的后壁之间的差异明显增大,以及与现生人类和黑猩猩相比,内外侧皮质的更明显的从外侧到内侧变薄,这表明在近端股骨的结构组织方面,人类之间的种间差异比以前报道的更大。仍然需要确定这些特征是否以及在多大程度上也存在于南方古猿的股骨颈中。