Human ancestor 'Lucy' adept at tree
climbing as well as walking
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[December 01, 2016]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Scientists using
sophisticated scanning technology on the fossil bones of the ancient
human ancestor from Ethiopia dubbed "Lucy" have determined that she was
adept at climbing trees as well as walking, an ability that in her case
may have proven fatal.
Researchers on Wednesday announced the results of an intensive analysis
of the 3.18 million-year-old fossils of Lucy, a member of a species
early in the human evolutionary lineage known as Australopithecus
afarensis.
The scans of Lucy's arm bones showed they were heavily built, like
chimpanzees, indicating that members of this species spent significant
time climbing in trees and used their arms to pull themselves up in the
branches.
Australopithecus afarensis possessed a combination of ape-like and
human-like traits. Scientists already knew its feet were adapted for
walking upright on two legs, rather than grasping trees, but had
wondered about whether it still spent time in trees like its ancestors.
Chimpanzees, the closest living relative of humans, spend a lot of time
in trees.
The researchers performed high-resolution X-ray CT scans on Lucy's
fossils at the University of Texas and compared the findings to data on
the bones of modern humans and chimpanzees.
"The debate about whether or not Lucy climbed trees has been raging ever
since her discovery 42 years ago this month - our study brings that
debate to a close," said University of Texas paleoanthropologist John
Kappelman, one of researchers in the study published in the journal PLOS
ONE.
The 1974 discovery of Lucy created a scientific sensation and shed light
on early stages of human evolution. Our species, Homo sapiens, appeared
in Africa 200,000 years ago.
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Lucy, a 3.18 million year old fossil specimen’s distal radius
undergoes computed tomographic scanning in this image from the
University of Texas at Austin, U.S. for release on November, 30,
2016. Courtesy Marsha Miller/The University of Texas at
Austin/Handout via REUTERS
"Our analysis required well-preserved upper and lower limb bones
from the same individual, something very rare in the fossil record,"
added the study's lead author, Christopher Ruff, a professor of
functional anatomy and evolution at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine in Baltimore.
The findings fit nicely with a study published in August by
Kappelman and other researchers that concluded that Lucy herself may
have died after a fall from a tree, based on bone fractures detected
in the fossils.
Kappelman has hypothesized that Lucy, about 3-1/2 feet tall (1.07
meters), foraged on the ground and sought nightly refuge in trees.
Her injuries indicated she fell from a height of more than 40 feet
(12 meters), that earlier study found.
"It may seem unique from our perspective that early hominins
(members of the human evolutionary lineage) like Lucy combined
walking on the ground on two legs with a significant amount of tree
climbing, but Lucy didn't know she was unique," he said.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Will Dunham)
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