An ape partial postcranial skeleton (KNM-NP 64631) from the Middle Miocene of Napudet, northern Kenya

IF 3.1 1区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Human Evolution Pub Date : 2024-06-05 DOI:10.1016/j.jhevol.2024.103519
Gabrielle A. Russo , Thomas C. Prang , Faye R. McGechie , Sharon Kuo , Carol V. Ward , Craig Feibel , Isaiah O. Nengo
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Abstract

An ape partial postcranial skeleton (KNM-NP 64631) was recovered during the 2015–2021 field seasons at Napudet, a Middle Miocene (∼13 Ma) locality in northern Kenya. Bony elements representing the shoulder, elbow, hip, and ankle joints, thoracic and lumbar vertebral column, and hands and feet, offer valuable new information about the body plan and positional behaviors of Middle Miocene apes. Body mass estimates from femoral head dimensions suggest that the KNM-NP 64631 individual was smaller-bodied (c. 13–17 kg) than some Miocene taxa from eastern Africa, including Ekembo nyanzae, and probably Equatorius africanus or Kenyapithecus wickeri, and was more comparable to smaller-bodied male Nacholapithecus kerioi individuals. Similar to many Miocene apes, the KNM-NP 64631 individual had hip and hallucal tarsometatarsal joints reflecting habitual hindlimb loading in a variety of postures, a distal tibia with a large medial malleolus, an inflated humeral capitulum, probably a long lumbar spine, and a long pollical proximal phalanx relative to femoral head dimensions. The KNM-NP 64631 individual departs from most Early Miocene apes in its possession of a more steeply beveled radial head and deeper humeral zona conoidea, reflecting enhanced supinating–pronating abilities at the humeroradial joint. The KNM-NP 64631 individual also differs from Early Miocene Ekembo heseloni in having a larger elbow joint (inferred from radial head size) relative to the mediolateral width of the lumbar vertebral bodies and a more asymmetrical talar trochlea, and in these ways recalls inferred joint proportions for, and talocrural morphology of, N. kerioi. Compared to most Early Miocene apes, the KNM-NP 64631 individual likely relied on more forelimb-dominated arboreal behaviors, perhaps including vertical climbing (e.g., extended elbow, hoisting). Moreover, the Napudet ape partial postcranial skeleton suggests that an arboreally adapted body plan characterized by relatively large (here, based on joint size) forelimbs, but lacking orthograde suspensory adaptations, may not have been ‘unusual’ among Middle Miocene apes.

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肯尼亚北部纳普代中新世的一具猿类部分颅后骨骼(KNM-NP 64631)
2015-2021 年野外考察季节期间,在肯尼亚北部中新世(13 Ma ∼ 13 Ma)的纳普德特(Napudet)发现了一具猿人部分颅后骨骼(KNM-NP 64631)。代表肩关节、肘关节、髋关节和踝关节、胸椎和腰椎以及手和脚的骨骼元素为了解中新世类人猿的身体计划和位置行为提供了宝贵的新信息。根据股骨头尺寸估算的体重表明,KNM-NP 64631个体比非洲东部的一些中新世类群(包括Ekembo nyanzae和可能的Equatorius africanus或Kenyapithecus wickeri)体型要小(约13-17千克),与体型较小的雄性Nacholapithecus kerioi个体更相近。与许多中新世类人猿相似,KNM-NP 64631个体的髋关节和跖跗关节反映了各种姿势下后肢的惯性负荷,胫骨远端有一个大的内侧踝骨,肱骨岬膨大,腰椎可能较长,相对于股骨头的尺寸,花骨近节指骨较长。KNM-NP 64631个体与大多数早中新世类人猿不同,它的桡骨头斜面更陡,肱骨内侧带更深,这反映出肱骨桡侧关节具有更强的上屈能力。KNM-NP 64631个体与早中新世的Ekembo heseloni个体也不同,它的肘关节(根据桡骨头的大小推断)相对于腰椎体的中外侧宽度更大,距骨蹄铁也更不对称,这些都回顾了N. kerioi的推断关节比例和距骨形态。与大多数早中新世猿类相比,KNM-NP 64631 个体可能更依赖于前肢为主的树栖行为,也许包括垂直攀爬(如伸肘、吊起)。此外,Napudet 猿的部分颅后骨骼表明,以相对较大(此处根据关节大小)的前肢为特征、但缺乏直立悬挂适应性的树栖适应性身体计划在中新世猿类中可能并不 "罕见"。
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Evolution
Journal of Human Evolution 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
15.60%
发文量
104
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Human Evolution concentrates on publishing the highest quality papers covering all aspects of human evolution. The central focus is aimed jointly at paleoanthropological work, covering human and primate fossils, and at comparative studies of living species, including both morphological and molecular evidence. These include descriptions of new discoveries, interpretative analyses of new and previously described material, and assessments of the phylogeny and paleobiology of primate species. Submissions should address issues and questions of broad interest in paleoanthropology.
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