Lucy walked upright - Assembly - Salesforce Research
3.2 million-year-old human ancestor 'Lucy' had massive leg muscles to stand up straight and climb trees
livescience.com - 11 months ago - Read On Original Website
Our 3.2 million-year-old ancestor "Lucy" could stand and walk upright just like modern humans do, new 3D muscle modeling reveals.
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right How did researchers determine Lucy's muscle model?
express.co.uk scarring and MRI data
inverse.com remains and MRIs of modern human limbs
livescience.com used scans from modern humans as a reference
standard.co.uk digital 3D
phys.org 3D-modeled the leg and pelvis muscles of the hominin Australopithecus afarensis using scans
arstechnica.com 3D digital re-creation
miragenews.com reconstruction
The finding bolsters a growing consensus among researchers that Australopithecus afarensis -- the extinct species to which Lucy belongs -- walked erect rather than with a chimpanzee-like, crouching waddle.
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right What is Australopithecus afarensis?
standard.co.uk a group of small-bodied and small-brained early human relatives
phys.org hominin
inverse.com female hominid species
interestingengineering.com ancient hominin species
The hominin's reconstructed pelvis and leg muscles also suggest that she could climb trees, meaning the species likely thrived in both forest and grassland habitats in East Africa 3 million to 4 million years ago.
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right What other characteristics allowed Lucy to thrive in her environment?
livescience.com massive leg muscles
standard.co.uk leg muscles were bigger and more powerful than those seen in modern humans
cnn.com both on the ground and in trees
inverse.com Her fully extended legs
"Lucy's muscles suggest that she was as proficient at bipedalism as we are, while possibly also being at home in the trees," Ashleigh Wiseman , a research associate at the University of Cambridge's McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research in the U.K. who conducted the modeling study, said in a statement. "She would have been able to exploit both habitats effectively."
Lucy's fossils are the best-preserved Australopithecus remains ever unearthed, with 40% of her skeleton recovered from Ethiopia's Hadar region in the mid-1970s. Her bones indicate that she stood 3.4 feet (1 meter) tall and weighed between 29 and 93 pounds (13 to 42 kilograms). Her discovery pointed to the possibility that human ancestors could walk upright long before they evolved bigger brains .
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right What does Lucy's skeleton indicate about human evolution?
cnn.com differs from modern humans
phys.org a capability to stand as erect as we do today
inverse.com paints a clearer picture of how modern humans eventually evolved
arstechnica.com Australopithecus afarensis was fully bipedal
miragenews.com could stand as erect as modern
Related: Human ancestor 'Lucy' gets a new face in stunning reconstruction
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right What is Lucy?
cnn.com 3.2-million-year-old human relative
inverse.com Iconic Ancient Human
livescience.com million-year-old human ancestor
arstechnica.com Australopithecus afarensis fossil AL 288-1
standard.co.uk Australopithecus afarensis
phys.org a young adult
miragenews.com 3.2M-yr-old hominin
interestingengineering.com 3.2 million-year-old skeleton fossils
While soft tissue is not visible in the fossil record, scientists can piece together what the extinct species' muscles may have looked like by using modern humans (Homo sapiens) as analogs. Our bone structure and muscle attachments can inform how muscles were layered on Lucy's skeleton.
In a study published Wednesday (June 14) in the journal Royal Society Open Science , Wiseman used a digital modeling approach to recreate 36 muscles in each of Lucy's legs.
Wiseman used scans from modern humans as a reference to layer muscles onto a virtual model of Lucy's skeleton. (Image credit: Dr Ashleigh Wiseman)
The reconstruction shows that Lucy could straighten her knee joints and extend her hips in a similar way to modern humans, suggesting that the species could stand and walk upright.
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right What did scientists discover about Lucy's ability to walk?
standard.co.uk had knee joints that allowed her to walk fully upright
livescience.com massive leg muscles
arstechnica.com fully bipedal, i.e., stood upright and walked erect
miragenews.com could stand as erect as modern humans
The model also reveals the proportions of fat and muscle in Lucy's legs, showing they were far more muscular than a modern human's and similar in composition to a bonobo's (Pan paniscus). While a human thigh is about 50% muscle, Lucy's were likely 74% and less fatty. Some of her calf and thigh muscles occupied twice as much space in her legs as they do in human legs today.
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right How does Lucy's muscle reconstruction compare to modern humans?
livescience.com could stand and walk upright just like
standard.co.uk bigger and more powerful
phys.org stand as erect as we do today
cnn.com much larger
miragenews.com could stand as erect
Lucy's knees demonstrated a wider range of motion in the extension-flexion axis than a human's. This, combined with her muscle mass, suggests that A. afarensis could utilize a wide range of habitats, from dense forests to grassy savannas. This type of locomotion is not seen in any modern animal, Wiseman said. "Lucy likely walked and moved in a way that we do not see in any living species today."
While the finding is based on an incomplete skeleton, and it remains unknown how often A. afarensis adopted an upright posture, the results of the analysis support the current consensus of Lucy's physical abilities.
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keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_right How does the discovery change the current understanding of Australopithecus afarensis?
phys.org revealing a capability to stand as erect as we do today
livescience.com walked erect rather than with a chimpanzee-like, crouching waddle
arstechnica.com fully bipedal
interestingengineering.com The 3D reconstruction shows that Lucy and other members of this hominid species were likely able to stand upright as we do today
The model revealed that Lucy's legs were far more muscular than a modern human's and more similar in composition to a bonobo's. (Image credit: Dr Ashleigh Wiseman)
"The current paper is not a game changer in our thinking," said Fred Spoor , a professor and researcher at the Natural History Museum in the U.K., who was not involved in the research.
However, reconstructing the muscles is a novel and exciting method to confirm bipedalism, Spoor told Live Science in an email. "This approach is certainly promising," he said. "It goes beyond the sometimes somewhat simplistic interpretations of paleontologists when it comes to inferring what movements and locomotor pattern characterized an extinct species."