
Digital modelling of legendary fossil鈥檚 soft tissue suggests Australopithecus afarensis had powerful leg and pelvic muscles suited to tree dwelling, but knee muscles that allowed fully erect walking.听听
Digital modelling of legendary fossil鈥檚 soft tissue suggests Australopithecus afarensis had powerful leg and pelvic muscles suited to tree dwelling, but knee muscles that allowed fully erect walking.听听
Lucy鈥檚 muscles suggest that she was as proficient at bipedalism as we are
Dr Ashleigh Wiseman
A 国际米兰对阵科莫 University researcher has digitally reconstructed the missing soft tissue of an early human ancestor 鈥 or hominin 鈥 for the first time, revealing a capability to stand as erect as we do today.
Dr Ashleigh Wiseman has 3D-modelled the leg and pelvis muscles of the hominin Australopithecus afarensis using scans of 鈥楲ucy鈥: the famous fossil specimen discovered in Ethiopia in the mid-1970s.
Australopithecus afarensis was an early human species that lived in East Africa over three million years ago. Shorter than us, with an ape-like face and smaller brain, but able to walk on two legs, it adapted to both tree and savannah dwelling 鈥 helping the species survive for almost a million years.
Named for the Beatles classic 鈥楲ucy in the Sky with Diamonds鈥, Lucy is one of the most complete examples to be unearthed of any type of Australopithecus 鈥 with 40% of her skeleton recovered.
Wiseman was able to use recently published open source data on the Lucy fossil to create a digital model of the 3.2 million-year-old hominin鈥檚 lower body muscle structure. The is published in the journal Royal Society Open Science. 听
The research recreated 36 muscles in each leg, most of which were much larger in Lucy and occupied greater space in the legs compared to modern humans.
For example, major muscles in Lucy鈥檚 calves and thighs were over twice the size of those in modern humans, as we have a much higher fat to muscle ratio. Muscles made up 74% of the total mass in Lucy鈥檚 thigh, compared to just 50% in humans.
Paleoanthropologists agree that Lucy was bipedal, but disagree on how she walked. Some have argued that she moved in a crouching waddle, similar to chimpanzees 鈥 our common ancestor 鈥 when they walk on two legs. Others believe that her movement was closer to our own upright bipedalism.
Research in the last 20 years have seen a consensus begin to emerge for fully erect walking, and Wiseman鈥檚 work adds further weight to this. Lucy鈥檚 knee extensor muscles, and the leverage they would allow, confirm an ability to straighten the knee joints as much as a healthy person can today.
鈥淟ucy鈥檚 ability to walk upright can only be known by reconstructing the path and space that a muscle occupies within the body,鈥 said Wiseman, from 国际米兰对阵科莫 University鈥檚 McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
鈥淲e are now the only animal that can stand upright with straight knees. Lucy鈥檚 muscles suggest that she was as proficient at bipedalism as we are, while possibly also being at home in the trees. Lucy likely walked and moved in a way that we do not see in any living species today,鈥 Wiseman said.
鈥Australopithecus afarensis would have roamed areas of open wooded grassland as well as more dense forests in East Africa around 3 to 4 million years ago. These reconstructions of Lucy鈥檚 muscles suggest that she would have been able to exploit both habitats effectively.鈥
Lucy was a young adult, who stood at just over one metre tall and probably weighed around 28kg. Lucy鈥檚 brain would have been roughly a third of the size of ours.听
To recreate the muscles of this hominin, Wiseman started with some living humans. Using MRI and CT scans of the muscle and bone structures of a modern woman and man, she was able to map the 鈥渕uscle paths鈥 and build a digital musculoskeletal model.
Wiseman then used existing virtual models of Lucy鈥檚 skeleton to 'rearticulate'听the joints 鈥 that is, put the skeleton back together. This work defined the axis from which each joint was able to move and rotate, replicating how they moved during life.
Finally, muscles were layered on top, based on pathways from modern human muscle maps, as well as what little 鈥渕uscle scarring鈥 was discernible (the traces of muscle connection detectable on the fossilised bones). 鈥淲ithout open access science, this research would not have been possible,鈥 said Wiseman.听听
These reconstructions can now help scientists understand how this human ancestor walked. 鈥淢uscle reconstructions have already been used to gauge running speeds of a T-Rex, for example,鈥 said Wiseman. 鈥淏y applying similar techniques to ancestral humans, we want to reveal the spectrum of physical movement that propelled our evolution 鈥 including those capabilities we have lost.鈥
Reference:
Ashleigh L. A. Wiseman. '.' Royal Society Open Science (2023). DOI:听10.1098/rsos.230356
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