4.3 Article

The thumb of Miocene apes: New insights from Castell de Barbera (Catalonia, Spain)

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Volume 148, Issue 3, Pages 436-450

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.22071

Keywords

pollical phalanges; Miocene hominoids; exaptation; power grasping; precision grasping

Funding

  1. Fulbright Commission [2009 BFUL 00049]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2009 BP-A 00226, 2008 BE1 00370, 2009 SGR 754 GRC]
  3. US National Science Foundation [BCS-0321893]
  4. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [CGL2011-28681, CGL2011-27343, RYC-2009-04533]
  5. European Commission's Research Infrastructure (SYNTHESYS project)
  6. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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Primate hands display a major selective compromise between locomotion and manipulation. The thumb may or may not participate in locomotion, but it plays a central role in most manipulative activities. Understanding whether or not the last common ancestor of humans and Pan displayed extant-ape-like hand proportions (i.e., relatively long fingers and a short thumb) can be clarified by the analysis of Miocene ape hand remains. Here we describe new pollical remainsa complete proximal phalanx and a partial distal phalanxfrom the middle/late Miocene site of Castell de Barbera (ca., 11.210.5 Ma, Valles-Penedes Basin), and provide morphometric and qualitative comparisons with other available Miocene specimens as well as extant catarrhines (including humans). Our results show that all available Miocene taxa (Proconsul, Nacholapithecus, Afropithecus, Sivapithecus, Hispanopithecus, Oreopithecus, and the hominoid from Castell de Barbera) share a similar phalangeal thumb morphology: the phalanges are relatively long, and the proximal phalanges have a high degree of curvature, marked insertions for the flexor muscles, a palmarly bent trochlea and a low basal height. All these features suggest that these Miocene apes used their thumb with an emphasis on flexion, most of them to powerfully assist the fingers during above-branch, grasping arboreal locomotion. Moreover, in terms of relative proximal phalangeal length, the thumb of Miocene taxa is intermediate between the long-thumbed humans and the short-thumbed extant apes. Together with previous evidence, this suggests that a moderate-length hand with relatively long thumbinvolved in locomotionis the original hand morphotype for the Hominidae. Am J Phys Anthropol 148:436450, 2012. (c) 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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