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Development of the hand and wrist bones in chimpanzees
Authors:Yuzuru Hamada  Toshifumi Udono  Migaku Teramoto  Ikuo Hayasaka
Affiliation:(1) Section of Morphology, Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, 484-8506 Inuyama, Aichi, Japan;(2) Kumamoto Primates Park of Sanwa Kagaku Kenkyusho Co. Ltd., Nishikuro-iwa 990, Ohta-O, Misumi-cho, Uto-gun, 869-3201 Kumamoto, Japan
Abstract:Skeletal developmental of chimpanzees was studied cross-sectionally. By application of the TW2 method, we described the skeletal development of chimpanzees and compared their skeletal development with humans'. A development pattern of chimpanzees repeated accelerations and decelerations displaying “early-juvenile trough,” “pre-adolescent peak,” “mid-adolescent trough,” and “post-adolescent peak” in incremental curves. Sex differences in skeletal development are slower development in males during infant and early juvenile phases, and greater increment around the adolescent phase in males. Females are fully mature at younger ages than males, e.g. about one and a half years. In comparison with chimpanzees, humans have such characteristics as a longer slower period of juvenile development and a shorter spurt-like adolescent fast period which ends with full maturity.
Keywords:Pan troglodytes   TW2 method  Skeletal maturation  RUS skeletal system  Cross-sectional study  Growth and development
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