Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, 19 Russell Street, Toronto, ON, M5S 2S2, Canada.
Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, 19 Russell Street, Toronto, ON, M5S 2S2, Canada; Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701, South Africa; Department of Anthropology and Center for Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, The George Washington University, Science and Engineering Hall, 800 22nd St NW, Suite 6000, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2021 Mar;152:102943. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102943. Epub 2021 Feb 8.
Modern humans originated between 300 and 200 ka in structured populations throughout Africa, characterized by regional interaction and diversity. Acknowledgment of this complex Pleistocene population structure raises new questions about the emergence of phenotypic diversity. Holocene Southern African Later Stone Age (LSA) skeletons and descendant Khoe-San peoples have small adult body sizes that may reflect long-term adaptation to the Cape environment. Pleistocene Southern African adult body sizes are not well characterized, but some postcranial elements are available. The most numerous Pleistocene postcranial skeletal remains come from Klasies River Mouth on the Southern Cape coast of South Africa. We compare the morphology of these skeletal elements with globally sampled Holocene groups encompassing diverse adult body sizes and shapes (n = 287) to investigate whether there is evidence for phenotypic patterning. The adult Klasies River Mouth bones include most of a lumbar vertebra, and portions of a left clavicle, left proximal radius, right proximal ulna, and left first metatarsal. Linear dimensions, shape characteristics, and cross-sectional geometric properties of the Klasies River Mouth elements were compared using univariate and multivariate methods. Between-group principal component analyses group Klasies River Mouth elements, except the proximal ulna, with LSA Southern Africans. The similarity is driven by size. Klasies River Mouth metatarsal cross-sectional geometric properties indicate similar torsional and compressive strength to those from LSA Southern Africans. Phenotypic expressions of small-bodied adult morphology in Marine Isotope Stages 5 and 1 suggest this phenotype may represent local convergent adaptation to life in the Cape.
现代人起源于 30 万至 20 万年前的非洲各地的结构化人群中,其特征是区域互动和多样性。承认这种复杂的更新世人口结构提出了关于表型多样性出现的新问题。全新世南非后期石器时代(LSA)骨骼和后裔科伊桑民族的成年人身材较小,这可能反映了长期适应开普环境的结果。更新世南非成年人的体型特征尚未得到很好的描述,但有一些后肢骨骼元素。数量最多的更新世后肢骨骼遗骸来自南非南开普省海岸的克雷斯河口。我们将这些骨骼元素的形态与全球采样的涵盖各种成人体型和形状的全新世群体(n=287)进行比较,以调查是否存在表型模式的证据。克雷斯河口的成人骨骼包括大部分腰椎、左侧锁骨、左侧近端桡骨、右侧近端尺骨和左侧第一跖骨。使用单变量和多变量方法比较了克雷斯河口骨骼元素的线性尺寸、形状特征和横截面积几何特性。组间主成分分析将克雷斯河口元素(除了近端尺骨)与 LSA 南非人群分组在一起。这种相似性是由大小驱动的。克雷斯河口跖骨的横截面积几何特性表明,其扭转和抗压强度与 LSA 南非人群相似。在海洋同位素阶段 5 和 1 中,成年人小体型形态的表型表达表明,这种表型可能代表了对开普生活的本地趋同适应。