4.8 Article

Biomechanics of the human thumb and the evolution of dexterity

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 1317-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.12.041

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC CoG) [724703]
  2. German Research Foundation [DFG FOR 2237]
  3. Ministry of Science, Research, and the Arts Baden-Wurttemberg [Az: 33-7533.-30-20/7/2]

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The study reveals that efficient thumb opposition appeared approximately 2 million years ago, possibly associated with the Homo genus, rather than the early proposed stone tool maker, Australopithecus. Later Homo species, including the small-brained Homo naledi, show high levels of thumb opposition dexterity, highlighting the increasing importance of cultural processes and manual dexterity in later human evolution.
Systematic tool production and use is one of humanity's defining characteristics, possibly originating as early as >3 million years ago.(1-3) Although heightened manual dexterity is considered to be intrinsically intertwined with tool use and manufacture, and critical for human evolution, its role in the emergence of early culture remains unclear. Most previous research on this question exclusively relied on direct morphological comparisons between early hominin and modern human skeletal elements, assuming that the degree of a species' dexterity depends on its similarity with the modern human form. Here, we develop a new approach to investigate the efficiency of thumb opposition, a fundamental component of manual dexterity, in several species of fossil hominins. Our work for the first time takes into account soft tissue as well as bone anatomy, integrating virtual modeling of musculus opponens pollicis and its interaction with three-dimensional bone shape form. Results indicate that a fundamental aspect of efficient thumb opposition appeared approximately 2 million years ago, possibly associated with our own genus Homo, and did not characterize Australopithecus, the earliest proposed stone tool maker. This was true also of the late Australopithecus species, Australopithecus sediba, previously found to exhibit human-like thumb proportions. In contrast, later Homo species, including the small-brained Homo naledi, show high levels of thumb opposition dexterity, highlighting the increasing importance of cultural processes and manual dexterity in later human evolution.

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