Homo naledi fossils from the Rising Star cave system provide important insights into the diversity of hand morphology within the genus Homo. Notably, the pollical (thumb) metacarpal (Mc1) displays an unusual suite of characteristics including a median longitudinal crest, a narrow proximal base, and broad flaring intrinsic muscle flanges. The present study evaluates the affinities of H. naledi Mc1 morphology via 3D geometric morphometric analysis of shaft shape using a broader comparative sample (n = 337) of fossil hominins, recent humans, apes, and cercopithecoid monkeys than in prior work. Results confirm that the H. naledi Mc1 is distinctive from most other hominins in being narrow at the proximal end but surmounted by flaring muscle flan...
The postcranial evidence for the Australopithecus genus indicates that australopiths were able biped...
International audienceThe upper limb of Homo naledi has previously been described from fragmentary m...
Systematic tool production and use is one of humanity’s defining characteristics, possibly originati...
Homo naledi fossils from the Rising Star cave system provide important insights into the diversity o...
Understanding the manual abilities of fossil hominins has been a focus of palaeoanthropological rese...
The abundant femoral assemblage of Homo naledi provides a unique opportunity to test hypotheses re...
The evolutionary transition from an ape-like to human-like upper extremity occurred in the context o...
A nearly complete right hand of an adult hominin was recovered from the Rising Star cave system, Sou...
International audienceHomo naledi skeletal material described from the Dinaledi Chamber, Rising Star...
The joint at the base of the thumb, specifically the one between the trapezium and the first metacar...
The inferred diversity of manual behaviors within the hominin lineage is exemplified by the mosaic m...
Abstract Objectives The dexterity of fossil hominins is often inferred by assessing the comparative ...
The postcranial evidence for the Australopithecus genus indicates that australopiths were able biped...
Newly discovered early hominin fossil scapulae have bolstered investigations of scapular shape, whic...
The postcranial evidence for the Australopithecus genus indicates that australopiths were able biped...
International audienceThe upper limb of Homo naledi has previously been described from fragmentary m...
Systematic tool production and use is one of humanity’s defining characteristics, possibly originati...
Homo naledi fossils from the Rising Star cave system provide important insights into the diversity o...
Understanding the manual abilities of fossil hominins has been a focus of palaeoanthropological rese...
The abundant femoral assemblage of Homo naledi provides a unique opportunity to test hypotheses re...
The evolutionary transition from an ape-like to human-like upper extremity occurred in the context o...
A nearly complete right hand of an adult hominin was recovered from the Rising Star cave system, Sou...
International audienceHomo naledi skeletal material described from the Dinaledi Chamber, Rising Star...
The joint at the base of the thumb, specifically the one between the trapezium and the first metacar...
The inferred diversity of manual behaviors within the hominin lineage is exemplified by the mosaic m...
Abstract Objectives The dexterity of fossil hominins is often inferred by assessing the comparative ...
The postcranial evidence for the Australopithecus genus indicates that australopiths were able biped...
Newly discovered early hominin fossil scapulae have bolstered investigations of scapular shape, whic...
The postcranial evidence for the Australopithecus genus indicates that australopiths were able biped...
International audienceThe upper limb of Homo naledi has previously been described from fragmentary m...
Systematic tool production and use is one of humanity’s defining characteristics, possibly originati...