Why aren't humans 'knuckle-walkers?'

Jovialis

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Our closest biological relatives, the African apes, are the only animals that walk on their knuckles; CWRU researchers discovered why

Researchers at Case Western Reserve University have cracked the evolutionary mystery of why chimpanzees and gorillas walk on their knuckles: The short explanation is that these African apes climb trees and they are mobile on the ground.

Their bodies—more specifically, their hands—represent a compromise adaptation allowing both forms of travel.

That's according to Bruce Latimer, professor of anthropology, anatomy and cognitive science and director of the Center for Human Origins, who was one of the study's authors. Their work was published in the Anatomical Record.

Latimer said much of the research ties anatomy with its relationship to Newton's laws of motion: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

"When you walk, there's a reaction from the ground pushing up," he said. "Chimps and gorillas are large bodied animals and, as a consequence, they have trouble dissipating all that ground reaction energy."

This is especially true given the anatomical adaptations they have for climbing, Latimer said.

"In running humans, these reaction forces, can be multiples of body weight on a single supporting foot," he said. "That's why we have a uniquely human adaptation the arch in our foot—it's a shock absorber."

This also why the old saw rings true that people with flat feet can't join the infantry, Latimer said. "Without the shock absorbing properties of the arch, long marches would result in damage to the bones of the foot and ankle."

In chimps and gorillas, climbing adaptations don't allow them to walk upright. They have long arms, short legs, stiff backs and cone shaped torsos.

Their triangle-shaped torsos allows for better rotation at the shoulder which also serves as a shock dissipater during knuckle walking, according to the research. In addition, chimps and gorillas also utilize their forearm muscles for climbing and for impact absorption when on the ground.

"Clearly, when humans stood up, we completely forfeited the use of our upper limbs for locomotion," Latimer said.

The "knuckle-dragging" mystery has challenged researchers for years.

"Walking on your knuckles is absolutely as odd as walking bipedally, a very peculiar way to get around. It doesn't make sense, and it's bothered anthropologists for years. Only chimps and gorillas do it. No one has come with the reason why—until now."

Latimer teaches microscopic anatomy and evolution at Case Western Reserve School of Dental Medicine. The focus of his research is the evolution of human walking.

"To understand how humans walk and run," he said, "you have to understand biomechanics."

Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2018-03-humans-knuckle-walkers.html#jCp
Why Do Knuckle‐Walking African Apes Knuckle‐Walk?

Abstract

Among living mammals, only the African apes and some anteaters adopt knuckle‐walking as their primary locomotor behavior. That Pan and Gorilla both knuckle‐walk has been cited as evidence of their common ancestry and a primitive condition for a combined Homo, Pan, and Gorilla clade. Recent research on forelimb ontogeny and anatomy, in addition to recently described hominin fossils, indicate that knuckle‐walking was independently acquired after divergence of the Pan and Gorilla lineages. Although the large‐bodied, largely suspensory orangutan shares some aspects of the African ape bauplan, it does not regularly knuckle‐walk when terrestrial. While many anatomical correlates of knuckle‐walking have been identified, a functional explanation of this unusual locomotor pattern has yet to be proposed. Here, we argue that it was adopted by African apes as a means of ameliorating the consequences of repetitive impact loadings on the soft and hard tissues of the forelimb by employing isometric and/or eccentric contraction of antebrachial musculature during terrestrial locomotion. Evidence of this adaptation can be found in the differential size and fiber geometry of the forearm musculature, and differences in torso shape between the knuckle‐walking and non‐knuckle‐walking apes (including humans). We also argue that some osteological features of the carpus and metacarpus that have been identified as adaptations to knuckle‐walking are consequences of cartilage remodeling during ontogeny rather than traits limiting motion in the hand and wrist. An understanding of the functional basis of knuckle‐walking provides an explanation of the locomotor parallelisms in modern Pan and Gorilla. Anat Rec, 301:496–514, 2018. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ar.23743
 
So was the human-chimp-gorilla common ancestor also walking like the apes?
 

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