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Foot fossils suggest hominids walked on two feet earlier than thought
by Brooks Hays
(UPI) Aug 15, 2018

Ancient forefoot joints suggest bipedalism emerged among hominins earlier than paleontologists previously thought.

Apes are really good at grasping objects with their feet. They can even use them to peel and eat bananas. But as hominin transitions from the tree tops to the flat savannah surface, the benefits of walking upright outweighed the ability to grasp, and forefoot joints evolved.

Recently, scientists at Stony Brook University analyzed dozens of fossil forefoot joints belonging to hominins, apes, monkeys and humans.

They researchers showed a structural shift among the fossils, essential for bipedalism, emerged earlier than previously thought. Scientists pinpointed the dorsal head expansion and "doming" of the metatarsal heads that differentiate hominin toe joints from those of apes.

Paleontologists detailed their analysis in the journal PNAS this week.

"We have identified novel bony shape variables in the forefoot across extant anthropoids and extinct hominins that are linked functionally to the emergence of bipedal walking," researchers wrote.

Previous research by scientists at Stony Brook showed that an adoption of bipedalism precipitated other skeletal shifts, including changes in skull design.

An earlier study found hominins developed a forward-shifted foramen magnum, the hole in the bottom of the skull through which the spinal cord passes. Scientists believe the adaptation ensured the brain remained centered over the spine.


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ABOUT US
Modern Flores Island pygmies show no genetic link to extinct 'hobbits'
Princeton NJ (SPX) Aug 08, 2018
Two pygmy populations on the same tropical island. One went extinct tens of thousands of years ago; the other still lives there. Are they related? It's a simple question that took years to answer. As no one has been able to recover DNA from the fossils of Homo floresiensis (nicknamed the "hobbit"), researchers had to create a tool for finding archaic genetic sequences in modern DNA. The technique was developed by scientists in the lab of Joshua Akey, a professor of ecology and evolutio ... read more

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