Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Montrer: 20 | 50 | 100
Résultats 1 - 2 de 2
Filtrer
Plus de filtres










Base de données
Gamme d'année
1.
Nat Commun ; 6: 8432, 2015 Oct 06.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26439101

RÉSUMÉ

Modern humans are characterized by a highly specialized foot that reflects our obligate bipedalism. Our understanding of hominin foot evolution is, although, hindered by a paucity of well-associated remains. Here we describe the foot of Homo naledi from Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa, using 107 pedal elements, including one nearly-complete adult foot. The H. naledi foot is predominantly modern human-like in morphology and inferred function, with an adducted hallux, an elongated tarsus, and derived ankle and calcaneocuboid joints. In combination, these features indicate a foot well adapted for striding bipedalism. However, the H. naledi foot differs from modern humans in having more curved proximal pedal phalanges, and features suggestive of a reduced medial longitudinal arch. Within the context of primitive features found elsewhere in the skeleton, these findings suggest a unique locomotor repertoire for H. naledi, thus providing further evidence of locomotor diversity within both the hominin clade and the genus Homo.


Sujet(s)
Os du pied/anatomie et histologie , Pied/anatomie et histologie , Fossiles , Hominidae/anatomie et histologie , Animaux , Évolution biologique , Gorilla gorilla/anatomie et histologie , Humains , Pan paniscus/anatomie et histologie , Pan troglodytes/anatomie et histologie , Pongo pygmaeus/anatomie et histologie
2.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 156(4): 543-52, 2015 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25594359

RÉSUMÉ

The midtarsal break was once treated as a dichotomous, non-overlapping trait present in the foot of non-human primates and absent in humans. Recent work indicates that there is considerable variation in human midfoot dorsiflexion, with some overlap with the ape foot. These findings have called into question the uniqueness of the human lateral midfoot, and the use of osteological features in fossil hominins to characterize the midfoot of our extinct ancestors. Here, we present data on plantar pressure and pedal mechanics in a large sample of adults and children (n = 671) to test functional hypotheses concerning variation in midfoot flexibility. Lateral midfoot peak plantar pressure correlates with both sagittal plane flexion at the lateral tarsometatarsal joint, and dorsiflexion at the hallucal metatarsophalangeal joint. The latter finding suggests that midfoot laxity may compromise hallucal propulsion. Multiple regression statistics indicate that a low arch and pronation of the foot explain 40% of variation in midfoot peak plantar pressure, independent of age and BMI. MRI scans on a small subset of study participants (n = 19) reveals that curvature of the base of the 4th metatarsal correlates with lateral midfoot plantar pressure and that specific anatomies of foot bones do indeed reflect relative midfoot flexibility. However, while the shape of the base of the 4th metatarsal may reliably reflect midfoot mobility in individual hominins, given the wide range of overlapping variation in midfoot flexibility in both apes and humans, we caution against generalizing foot function in extinct hominin species until larger fossils samples are available.


Sujet(s)
Pied/anatomie et histologie , Pied/physiologie , Os du métatarse/anatomie et histologie , Os du métatarse/physiologie , Animaux , Hominidae/anatomie et histologie , Hominidae/physiologie , Humains , Modèles linéaires , Paléontologie , Marche à pied/physiologie
SÉLECTION CITATIONS
DÉTAIL DE RECHERCHE