Fuente: Science News
 Expuesto el: lunes, 16 de abril de 2012 21:11
 Autor: Science News
 Asunto: Ancient walking gets weirder
| Fossils from two human   ancestors suggest diversity in gait, stance Web   edition : 4:11   pm 
 PORTLAND, Ore. — The simple act of walking   continues to take strange detours among ancient human ancestors. To wit, 1.5   million-year-old footprints excavated in Africa, initially thought to reflect   a thoroughly modern walking style, were instead made by individuals that   walked differently than people today do, researchers reported April 13 at the   annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists. And   findings presented April 12 at the meeting revealed the surprisingly apelike   qualities of foot fossils from a 2 million-year-old species that some   researchers regard as the root of the Homo   genus. These reports come on the   heels of evidence that a previously unknown member of the human evolutionary   family 3.4 million years ago possessed a gorillalike grasping big toe and an   ungainly stride (SN Online: 3/28/12). Depth measurements of the   African footprints, discovered at Kenya’s Ileret site, differ at 10 landmarks   from the footprints of people who live in that area today, said graduate student   Kevin Hatala of George Washington University in Washington, D.C. “We can infer that the   ancient Ileret individuals had a normal, functional gait, but they may have   walked differently than we do,” Hatala said. For now, it’s uncertain just how   these hominids walked and whether they belonged to Homo erectus, a   possibly direct human ancestor, or to the side-branch species Paranthropus boisei. Technologies that produce   3D images of footprints preserved in different types of soil should soon   yield insights into how hominids walked at Ileret and at other ancient sites,   commented graduate student Sarita Morse of the University of Liverpool in   England. Hatala and his colleagues   compared five preserved Ileret footprints to those of 38 Daasanach herders in   Kenya, none of whom wear shoes. Participants walked across a pressure pad   before walking across moistened Ileret soil that approximated the conditions   under which the ancient footprints were made. Pressure measurements at 10   spots across the bottom of the foot closely corresponded to depth   measurements at the same spots on volunteers’ footprints. Disparities in depth   measurements between Daasanach and ancient Ileret footprints signaled that   the hominids walked unlike people today do. Other comparisons to   Daasanach footprints indicated that two sets of Ileret tracks were made by   individuals who were walking, not running, and who stood about 5 feet, 6   inches tall and weighed 110 pounds. That’s in the general size range of   Daasanach people today. Meanwhile, new analyses   of foot bones from two partial Australopithecus   sediba skeletons, excavated in South Africa (SN: 5/8/10, p. 14), show that this hominid had an   upwardly curved, mobile mid-foot built for tree-climbing, reported   anthropologist Jeremy DeSilva of Boston University. Previous work had   identified thin, apelike heels combined with humanlike ankles and arches in   these fossil skeletons. “This is a really weird   foot,” DeSilva said. “Diversity in upright stances must have extended for a   long time during hominid evolution.” 
 
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