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Variation, mosaicism and degeneracy in the hominin foot

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY HUMAN SCIENCES
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/ehs.2021.50

Keywords

Foot; degeneracy; variability; biomechanics; locomotion; plasticity

Funding

  1. Leverhulme Trust [EM-2017-010\2]

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The fossil record is naturally scarce and incomplete, with soft tissue and important bony details being devoured over time, leading to an unstable classification of fossil taxa. Extensive work in biology, movement sciences, and neurobiology suggests that the unavoidable variation in the fossil record can be described more rigorously.
The fossil record is scarce and incomplete by nature. Animals and ecological processes devour soft tissue and important bony details over time and, when the dust settles, we are faced with a patchy record full of variation. Fossil taxa are usually defined by craniodental characteristics, so unless postcranial bones are found associated with a skull, assignment to taxon is unstable. Naming a locomotor category based on fossil bone morphology by analogy to living hominoids is not uncommon, and when no single locomotor label fits, postcrania are often described as exhibiting a 'mosaic' of traits. Here, we contend that the unavoidable variation that characterises the fossil record can be described far more rigorously based on extensive work in human neurobiology and neuroanatomy, movement sciences and motor control and biomechanics research. In neurobiology, degeneracy is a natural mechanism of adaptation allowing system elements that are structurally different to perform the same function. This concept differs from redundancy as understood in engineering, where the same function is performed by identical elements. Assuming degeneracy, structurally different elements are able to produce different outputs in a range of environmental contexts, favouring ecological robusticity by enabling adaptations. Furthermore, as degeneracy extends to genome level, genetic variation is sustained, so that genes which might benefit an organism in a different environment remain part of the genome, favouring species' evolvability.

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