Publication | Open Access
Human-like external function of the foot, and fully upright gait, confirmed in the 3.66 million year old Laetoli hominin footprints by topographic statistics, experimental footprint-formation and computer simulation
177
Citations
50
References
2011
Year
Gait AnalysisTopographic StatisticsHuman FootAnatomyOrthopaedic SurgeryKinesiologyBioarchaeologyLanguage StudiesHealth SciencesMorphological EvidenceLaetoli Footprint MorphologyPaleoanthropologyUpright GaitEvolutionary BiomechanicsFootprint FormationHuman EvolutionBipedal LocomotionEvolutionary BiologyPathological GaitAnthropologyHuman MovementPrimate FossilComputer Simulation
It is commonly held that the major functional features of the human foot (e.g. a functional longitudinal medial arch, lateral to medial force transfer and hallucal (big-toe) push-off) appear only in the last 2 Myr, but functional interpretations of footbones and footprints of early human ancestors (hominins) prior to 2 million years ago (Mya) remain contradictory. Pixel-wise topographical statistical analysis of Laetoli footprint morphology, compared with results from experimental studies of footprint formation; foot-pressure measurements in bipedalism of humans and non-human great apes; and computer simulation techniques, indicate that most of these functional features were already present, albeit less strongly expressed than in ourselves, in the maker of the Laetoli G-1 footprint trail, 3.66 Mya. This finding provides strong support to those previous studies which have interpreted the G-1 prints as generally modern in aspect.
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