Earliest axial fossils from the genus Australopithecus

被引:6
|
作者
Meyer, Marc R. [1 ]
Williams, Scott A. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Chaffey Coll, Dept Anthropol, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91737 USA
[2] NYU, Dept Anthropol, Ctr Study Human Origins, 25 Waverly Pl, New York, NY 10003 USA
[3] New York Consortium Evolutionary Primatol, New York, NY 10024 USA
关键词
Hominin evolution; Australopithecus anamensis; Pliocene hominins; Vertebrae; Axial skeleton; 1ST CERVICAL VERTEBRA; FUNCTIONAL-MORPHOLOGY; PONTICULUS-POSTICUS; LAKE TURKANA; NECK POSTURE; NACHOLAPITHECUS-KERIOI; RADIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS; BRIEF COMMUNICATION; PREVALENCE ANALYSIS; SAGITTAL DIAMETER;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhevol.2019.05.004
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Australopitheus anamensis fossils demonstrate that craniodentally and postcranially the taxon was more primitive than its evolutionary successor Australopithecus afarensis. Postcranial evidence suggests habitual bipedality combined with primitive upper limbs and an inferred significant arboreal adaptation. Here we report on A. anamensis fossils from the Assa Issie locality in Ethiopia's Middle Awash area dated to similar to 4.2 Ma, constituting the oldest known Australopithecus axial remains. Because the spine is the interface between major body segments, these fossils can be informative on the adaptation, behavior and our evolutionary understanding of A. anamensis. The atlas, or first cervical vertebra (C1), is similar in size to Homo sapiens, with synapomorphies in the articular facets and transverse processes. Absence of a retroglenoid tubercle suggests that, like humans, A. anamensis lacked the atlantoclavicularis muscle, resulting in reduced capacity for climbing relative to the great apes. The retroflexed C2 odontoid process and long C6 spinous process are reciprocates of facial prognathism, a long clivus and retroflexed foramen magnum, rather than indications of locomotor or postural behaviors. The T1 is derived in shape and size as in Homo with an enlarged vertebral body epiphyseal surfaces for mitigating the high-magnitude compressive loads of full-time bipedality. The full costal facet is unlike the extant great ape demifacet pattern and represents the oldest evidence for the derived univertebral pattern in hominins. These fossils augment other lines of evidence in A. anamensis indicating habitual bipedality despite some plesiomorphic vertebral traits related to craniofacial morphology independent of locomotor or postural behaviors (i.e., a long clivus and a retroflexed foramen magnum). Yet in contrast to craniodental lines of evidence, some aspects of vertebral morphology in A. anamensis appear more derived than its descendant A. afarensis. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:189 / 214
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Australopithecus sediba and the earliest origins of the genus Homo
    Berger, Lee R.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2012, 90 : 117 - 131
  • [3] Comparison of hominid fossils attributed to Australopithecus and Homo
    Thackeray, JF
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, 2003, 99 (5-6) : 241 - 242
  • [4] Reassessment of the earliest documented stegosaurian fossils from Asia
    Borinder, Niclas H.
    Poropat, Stephen F.
    Kear, Benjamin P.
    [J]. CRETACEOUS RESEARCH, 2016, 68 : 61 - 69
  • [5] IS AUSTRALOPITHECUS-RAMIDUS OUR EARLIEST ANCESTOR
    WOOD, B
    [J]. RECHERCHE, 1995, 26 (272): : 80 - 81
  • [6] The earliest Ordovician trace fossils Cruziana and Rusophycus from Baltica
    Paernaste, Helje
    Toom, Ursula
    Popov, Leonid
    [J]. ESTONIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2023, 72 (01) : 154 - 154
  • [7] Alternative interpretations of some earliest Ediacaran fossils from China
    Van Iten, Heyo
    Leme, Juliana de M.
    Marques, Antonio C.
    Simoes, Marcello G.
    [J]. ACTA PALAEONTOLOGICA POLONICA, 2013, 58 (01) : 111 - 113
  • [8] EARLIEST PHANEROZOIC OR LATEST PROTEROZOIC FOSSILS FROM THE ARABIAN SHIELD
    CLOUD, P
    AWRAMIK, SM
    MORRISON, K
    HADLEY, DG
    [J]. PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH, 1979, 10 (1-2) : 73 - 93
  • [9] Images of the Earth's earliest fossils?
    Jill Dill Pasteris
    Brigitte Wopenka
    [J]. Nature, 2002, 420 : 476 - 477
  • [10] Images of the Earth's earliest fossils?
    J. William Schopf
    Anatoliy B. Kudryavtsev
    David G. Agresti
    Thomas J. Wdowiak
    Andrew D. Czaja
    [J]. Nature, 2002, 420 : 477 - 477