Abstract :
The first unquestionably bipedal early human ancestors, the species
Australopithecus afarensis,
were markedly
different to ourselves in body proportions, having a long trunk and short legs. Some have argued that
′
chimpanzeelike
′
features such as these suggest a ‘bent-hip, bent-knee’ (BHBK) posture would have been adopted during gait.
Computer modelling studies, however, indicate that this early human ancestor could have walked in a reasonably
efficient upright posture, whereas BHBK posture would have nearly doubled the mechanical energy cost of locomotion,
as it does the physiological cost of locomotion in ourselves. More modern body proportions first appear
at around 1.8-1.5 Ma, with
Homo ergaster
(early African
Homo erectus
), represented by the Nariokotome skeleton
KNM-WT 15000, in which the legs were considerably longer in relation to the trunk than they are in human adults,
although this skeleton represents an adolescent. Several authors have suggested that this morphology would have
allowed faster, more endurant walking. But during the same period, the archaeological record indicates a sharp
rise in distances over which stone tools or raw materials are transported. Is this coincidental, or can load-carrying
also be implicated in selection for a more modern morphology? Computer simulations of loaded walking, verified
against kinetic data for humans, show that BHBK gait is even more ineffective while load-carrying. However, walking
erect, the Nariokotome individual could have carried loads of 10-15% body mass for less cost, relative to body
size, than AL 288-1 walking erect but unloaded. In fact, to the extent that our sample of humans is typical, KNMWT
15000 would have had better mechanical effectiveness in bearing light loads on the back than modern human
adults. Thus, selection for effectiveness in load-carrying, as well as in endurant walking, is indeed likely to have
been implicated in the evolution of modern body proportions.
Keywords :
KNM-WT 15000 , Bipedalism , Biomechanics , computer modelling , load-carrying