Williams Scott A, Zeng Iris, Paton Glen J, Yelverton Christopher, Dunham ChristiAna, Ostrofsky Kelly R, Shukman Saul, Avilez Monica V, Eyre Jennifer, Loewen Tisa, Prang Thomas C, Meyer Marc R
Center for the Study of Human Origins, Department of Anthropology, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA.
New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology, New York, NY 10024, USA.
PNAS Nexus. 2022 Mar 2;1(1):pgab005. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgab005. eCollection 2022 Mar.
Lumbar lordosis is a key adaptation to bipedal locomotion in the human lineage. Dorsoventral spinal curvatures enable the body's center of mass to be positioned above the hip, knee, and ankle joints, and minimize the muscular effort required for postural control and locomotion. Previous studies have suggested that Neandertals had less lordotic (ventrally convex) lumbar columns than modern humans, which contributed to historical perceptions of postural and locomotor differences between the two groups. Quantifying lower back curvature in extinct hominins is entirely reliant upon bony correlates of overall lordosis, since the latter is significantly influenced by soft tissue structures (e.g. intervertebral discs). Here, we investigate sexual dimorphism, ancestry, and lifestyle effects on lumbar vertebral body wedging and inferior articular facet angulation, two features previously shown to be significantly correlated with overall lordosis in living individuals, in a large sample of modern humans and Neandertals. Our results demonstrate significant differences between postindustrial cadaveric remains and archaeological samples of people that lived preindustrial lifestyles. We suggest these differences are related to activity and other aspects of lifestyle rather than innate population (ancestry) differences. Neandertal bony correlates of lumbar lordosis are significantly different from all human samples except preindustrial males. Therefore, although Neandertals demonstrate more bony kyphotic wedging than most modern humans, we cast doubt on proposed locomotor and postural differences between the two lineages based on inferred lumbar lordosis (or lack thereof), and we recommend future research compare fossils to modern humans from varied populations and not just recent, postindustrial samples.
腰椎前凸是人类谱系中对双足行走的关键适应性特征。脊柱的背腹侧弯曲能使身体的重心位于髋、膝和踝关节上方,并将姿势控制和行走所需的肌肉力量降至最低。此前的研究表明,尼安德特人的腰椎前凸(腹侧凸出)程度低于现代人类,这导致了人们对两组人群在姿势和运动方面差异的历史认知。由于腰椎前凸受软组织结构(如椎间盘)的显著影响,因此在已灭绝的古人类中量化下背部弯曲完全依赖于整体前凸的骨骼相关特征。在此,我们在大量现代人类和尼安德特人的样本中,研究了性别二态性、祖先和生活方式对腰椎椎体楔形变和下关节突角度的影响,这两个特征此前已被证明与活体个体的整体前凸显著相关。我们的结果表明,后工业化时期的尸体遗骸与过着工业化前生活方式的人群的考古样本之间存在显著差异。我们认为这些差异与活动及生活方式的其他方面有关,而非先天的种群(祖先)差异。除了工业化前的男性外,尼安德特人腰椎前凸的骨骼相关特征与所有人类样本均有显著差异。因此,尽管尼安德特人比大多数现代人类表现出更多的骨驼背楔形变,但我们对基于推断的腰椎前凸(或缺乏腰椎前凸)而提出的两个谱系之间的运动和姿势差异表示怀疑,并且我们建议未来的研究将化石与来自不同人群的现代人类进行比较,而不仅仅是与近期的后工业化样本进行比较。