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Bipedalism or bipedalisms: The os coxae of StW 573.

Authors :
Crompton, Robin
Elton, Sarah
Heaton, Jason
Pickering, Travis
Carlson, Kristian
Jashashvili, Tea
Beaudet, Amelie
Bruxelles, Laurent
Kuman, Kathleen
Thorpe, Susannah K.
Hirasaki, Eishi
Scott, Christopher
Sellers, William
Pataky, Todd
Clarke, Ronald
McClymont, Juliet
Source :
Journal of Anatomy. Jul2024, p1. 21p. 24 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

There has been a long debate about the possibility of multiple contemporaneous species of Australopithecus in both eastern and southern Africa, potentially exhibiting different forms of bipedal locomotion. Here, we describe the previously unreported morphology of the os coxae in the 3.67 Ma Australopithecus prometheus StW 573 from Sterkfontein Member 2, comparing it with variation in ossa coxae in living humans and apes as well as other Plio‐Pleistocene hominins. Statistical comparisons indicate that StW 573 and 431 resemble humans in their anteroposteriorly great iliac crest breadth compared with many other early australopiths, whereas Homo ergaster KNM WT 15000 surprisingly also has a relatively anterioposteriorly short iliac crest. StW 573 and StW 431 appear to resemble humans in having a long ischium compared with Sts 14 and KNM WT 15000. A Quadratic Discriminant Function Analysis of morphology compared with other Plio‐Pleistocene hominins and a dataset of modern humans and hominoids shows that, while Lovejoy's heuristic model of the Ardipithecus ramidus os coxae falls with Pongo or in an indeterminate group, StW 573 and StW 431 from Sterkfontein Member 4 are consistently classified together with modern humans. Although clearly exhibiting the classic “basin shaped” bipedal pelvis, Sts 14 (also from Sterkfontein), AL 288‐1 Australopithecus afarensis, MH2 Australopithecus sediba and KNM‐WT 15000 occupy a position more peripheral to modern humans, and in some analyses are assigned to an indeterminate outlying group. Our findings strongly support the existence of two species of Australopithecus at Sterkfontein and the variation we observe in os coxae morphology in early hominins is also likely to reflect multiple forms of bipedality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00218782
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Anatomy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178526208
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/joa.14106