Abstract :
We review the evolution of human bipedal locomotion with a particular emphasis on the evolution of the foot.
We begin in the early twentieth century and focus particularly on hypotheses of an ape-like ancestor for humans
and human bipedal locomotion put forward by a succession of Gregory, Keith, Morton and Schultz. We give
consideration to Morton’s (1935) synthesis of foot evolution, in which he argues that the foot of the common ancestor
of modern humans and the African apes would be intermediate between the foot of
Pan
and
Hylobates
whereas
the foot of a hypothetical early hominin would be intermediate between that of a gorilla and a modern human.
From this base rooted in comparative anatomy of living primates we trace changing ideas about the evolution of
human bipedalism as increasing amounts of postcranial fossil material were discovered. Attention is given to
the work of John Napier and John Robinson who were pioneers in the interpretation of Plio-Pleistocene hominin
skeletons in the 1960s. This is the period when the wealth of evidence from the southern African australopithecine
sites was beginning to be appreciated and Olduvai Gorge was revealing its first evidence for
Homo habilis
. In more
recent years, the discovery of the Laetoli footprint trail, the AL 288-1 (
A. afarensis
) skeleton, the wealth of
postcranial material from Koobi Fora, the Nariokotome
Homo ergaster
skeleton, Little Foot (Stw 573) from
Sterkfontein in South Africa, and more recently tantalizing material assigned to the new and very early taxa
Orrorin
tugenensis
,
Ardipithecus ramidus
and
Sahelanthropus tchadensis
has fuelled debate and speculation. The varying
interpretations based on this material, together with changing theoretical insights and analytical approaches, is
discussed and assessed in the context of new three-dimensional morphometric analyses of australopithecine and
Homo
foot bones, suggesting that there may have been greater diversity in human bipedalism in the earlier phases
of our evolutionary history than previously suspected.
Keywords :
Australopithecus , HOMO , Bipedal locomotion , evolution of the foot , Human evolution