Publication | Open Access
The shape of the Neandertal femur is primarily the consequence of a hyperpolar body form
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Citations
19
References
2003
Year
Anatomical ModelSurgeryAnatomyComparative AnatomyEntire HipOrthopaedic SurgeryGross AnatomyKinesiologyBioarchaeologyBiomechanicsHyperpolar Body FormLanguage StudiesNeandertal FemoraHip MechanicsAllometric StudyMusculoskeletal FunctionSkeletal BiologyHuman Musculoskeletal SystemHuman EvolutionTemporal BoneAxial SkeletonBody SizeEvolutionary BiologyNeandertal FemurMedicine
Neandertal femora are distinct from contemporaneous near-modern human femora. Traditionally, these contrasts in femoral shape have been explained as the result of the elevated activity levels and limited cultural abilities of Neandertals. More recently, however, researchers have realized that many of these femoral differences may be explained by the cold-adapted bodies of Neandertals vs. the warm-adapted bodies of near-modern humans. This study explicitly tests this proposed link between climate-induced body proportions and femoral shape by considering the entire hip as a unit by using geometric morphometric methods adapted to deal with articulated structures. Based on recent human patterns of variation, most contrasts in shape between the femora of Neandertals and near-modern humans seem to be secondary consequences of differences in climate-induced body proportions. These results, considered in light of hip mechanics during growth, highlight the importance of developmental and functional integration in determining skeletal form.
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