|
 |
 |

SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Anthropology
Origin of bipedalism
seems most closely tied to environmental changes
Andrea
Lynn, HumanitiesEditor
(217) 333-2177; a-lynn@uiuc.edu
5/1/02
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
-- During the past 100 years, scientists have tossed around a great
many hypotheses about the evolutionary route to bipedalism, and what
inspired our prehuman ancestors to stand up straight and amble off on
two feet.
Now, after an extensive study of evolutionary, anatomical and fossil
evidence, a team of paleoanthropologists has narrowed down the number
of tenable hypotheses to explain the origin of bipedalism and our prehuman
ancestors' method of navigating their world before they began walking
upright.
The hypothesis they found the most support for regarding the origin
of bipedalism is the one that argues our ancestors began walking upright
largely in response to environmental changes -- in particular, to the
growing incidence of open spaces and the way that changed the distribution
of food.
In response to periods of cooling and drying, which thinned out dense
forests and produced "mosaics" of forests, woodlands and grasslands,
it seems likely that "some apes maintained a
forest-oriented adaptation, while others may have begun to exploit forest
margins and grassy woodlands," said paleoanthropologist Brian Richmond,
lead author in the new study. The process of increasing commitment to
bipediality probably involved "an extended and complex opening
of habitats, rather than a single, abrupt transition from dense forest
to open savanna," he said.
Richmond, from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, with
paleoanthropologists David Begun from the University of Toronto and
David Strait from the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine, describe
their findings, which involved a comprehensive review and analysis of
the five leading hypotheses on the origin of bipedalism, in a recent
issue of the Yearbook of Physical Anthropology. Other hypotheses that
remain viable, according to the team: "freeing" the hands
for carrying or for some kind of tool use, and an increased emphasis
on foraging from branches of small fruit trees, which is the context
in which modern chimpanzees spend the most time on two legs.
For their study, the researchers combined data from biomechanics --
movement, posture and stesses in bones and joints -- and from bone growth
and development. They found that our prehuman ancestors had terrestrial
features in the hands and feet, climbing features throughout the skeleton,
and knuckle-walking features in the wrist and hand; that finger bone
curvature is responsive to changes in arboreal activity during growth,
lending support to the hypothesis that many early hominid species, although
bipedal, still climbed trees. Evidence from the wrist joint "suggests
that the earliest humans evolved bipedalism from an ancestor adapted
for knuckle-walking on the ground and climbing in trees."
The YPA article, according to Richmond, is "the first attempt in
decades to bring together all of the available evidence for the argument
that the earliest human biped evolved from ancestors that both knuckle-walked
and climbed trees, rather than from ancestors living exclusively in
trees and 'coming down from the trees,' or walking on the ground in
ways similar to modern baboons."
"Evolution proceeds at an extremely slow pace and, therefore, there
is no justification to assume that we are observing dramatic evolutionary
events in every population currently under study."
|
 |
 |
|