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Trabecular architecture and joint loading of the proximal humerus in extant hominoids,Ateles, and Australopithecus africanus
Authors:Tracy L. Kivell  Rebecca Davenport  Jean‐Jacques Hublin  J. Francis Thackeray  Matthew M. Skinner
Affiliation:1. School of Anthropology and Conservation, Skeletal Biology Research Centre, University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom;2. Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany;3. Evolutionary Studies Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;4. Department of Anthropology, University College London, London, United Kingdom
Abstract:

Objectives

Several studies have investigated potential functional signals in the trabecular structure of the primate proximal humerus but with varied success. Here, we apply for the first time a “whole‐epiphyses” approach to analysing trabecular bone in the humeral head with the aim of providing a more holistic interpretation of trabecular variation in relation to habitual locomotor or manipulative behaviors in several extant primates and Australopithecus africanus.

Materials and methods

We use a “whole‐epiphysis” methodology in comparison to the traditional volume of interest (VOI) approach to investigate variation in trabecular structure and joint loading in the proximal humerus of extant hominoids, Ateles and A. africanus (StW 328).

Results

There are important differences in the quantification of trabecular parameters using a “whole‐epiphysis” versus a VOI‐based approach. Variation in trabecular structure across knuckle‐walking African apes, suspensory taxa, and modern humans was generally consistent with predictions of load magnitude and inferred joint posture during habitual behaviors. Higher relative trabecular bone volume and more isotropic trabeculae in StW 328 suggest A. africanus may have still used its forelimbs for arboreal locomotion.

Discussion

A whole‐epiphysis approach to analysing trabecular structure of the proximal humerus can help distinguish functional signals of joint loading across extant primates and can provide novel insight into habitual behaviors of fossil hominins.
Keywords:arboreal  cancellous bone  hominin  locomotion  upper limb
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