McHenry H M
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1978 Jul;49(1):15-22. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330490104.
Associated fore- and hindlimb parts of five individuals are known from the hominid Plio-Pleistocene fossil collections in Africa. Four of these have been classified as Australopithecus and show definite evidence that in comparison with humans, forelimbs were relatively large and hindlimbs were relatively small. The fourth individual, placed in the genus Homo, has human proportions. These findings do not necessarily imply locomotor differences: the forelimbs may have been relatively long in Australopithecus simply because they were as yet not completely reduced from their generalized hominoid ancestral state.
从非洲的上新世-更新世古人类化石收藏中可知五个个体的相关前肢和后肢部分。其中四个已被归类为南方古猿,并有明确证据表明,与人类相比,它们的前肢相对较大而后肢相对较小。第四个个体被归入人属,具有人类的比例特征。这些发现并不一定意味着运动方式存在差异:南方古猿的前肢可能相对较长,仅仅是因为它们尚未完全从类人猿的一般祖先状态中退化。