Authors
Katherine K Whitcome, Liza J Shapiro, Daniel E Lieberman
Publication date
2007/12/13
Journal
Nature
Volume
450
Issue
7172
Pages
1075-1078
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
As predicted by Darwin, bipedal posture and locomotion are key distinguishing features of the earliest known hominins,. Hominin axial skeletons show many derived adaptations for bipedalism, including an elongated lumbar region, both in the number of vertebrae and their lengths, as well as a marked posterior concavity of wedged lumbar vertebrae, known as a lordosis,,. The lordosis stabilizes the upper body over the lower limbs in bipeds by positioning the trunk’s centre of mass (COM) above the hips. However, bipedalism poses a unique challenge to pregnant females because the changing body shape and the extra mass associated with pregnancy shift the trunk’s COM anterior to the hips. Here we show that human females have evolved a derived curvature and reinforcement of the lumbar vertebrae to compensate for this bipedal obstetric load. Similarly dimorphic morphologies in fossil vertebrae of …
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