Abstract :
The well-known fossil hominoid
Proconsul
from the Early Miocene of Kenya was a non-specialized arboreal quadruped
with strong pollicial/hallucial assisted grasping capability. It lacked most of the suspensory specializations
acquired in living hominoids.
Nacholapithecus
, however, from the Middle Miocene of Kenya, although in part sharing
with
Proconsul
the common primitive anatomical body design, was more specialized for orthograde climbing, ‘hoisting’
and bridging, with the glenoid fossae of the scapula probably being cranially orientated, the forelimbs proportionally
large, and very long toes. Its tail loss suggests relatively slow movement, although tail loss may already have
occurred in
Proconsul
.
Nacholapithecus
-like positional behaviour might thus have been a basis for development of
more suspensory specialized positional behaviour in later hominoids. Unfortunately, after 13 Ma, there is a gap in the
hominoid postcranial record in Africa until 6 Ma. Due to this gap, a scenario for later locomotor evolution prior to the
divergence of
Homo
and
Pan
cannot be determined with certainty. The time gap also causes difficulties when we seek
to determine polarities of morphological traits in very early hominids. Interpretation of the form-function relationships
of postcranial features in incipient hominids will be difficult because it is predicted that they had incorporated
bipedalism only moderately into their total positional repertoires. However, Japanese macaques, which are trained in
traditional bipedal performance, may provide useful hints about bipedal adaptation in the protohominids. Kinematic
analyses revealed that these macaques walked bipedally with a longer stride and lower stride frequency than used
by ordinary macaques, owing to a more extended posture of the hindlimb joints. The body centre of gravity rises
during the single-support phase of stance. Energetic studies of locomotion in these bipedal macaques revealed that
energetic expenditure was 20-30% higher in bipedalism than in quadrupedalism, regardless of walking velocity
Keywords :
bipedal adaptation , functional anatomy , hominoids , Locomotion , Miocene