The radial wrist as a morphological and functional unit in extant African apes and humans
Abstract
Previous research has identified multiple aspects of carpal (i.e., wrist bones) morphology
in Homo sapiens (humans) and some fossil hominin species that may reflect adaptations to the
habitual use and manufacture of stone tools, particularly among bones from the radial side of the
wrist (i.e., the, trapezium, trapezoid, scaphoid, and capitate). Using three-dimensional (3D)
surface models of radial-side carpals and 3D geometric morphometrics (3DGM), this study aims
to quantify the shape variation of this anatomical region among extant African apes and humans.
Extending on previous studies that have typically quantified carpal morphology by studying each
bone individually and in isolation from each other, this study marks the first time where these
four radial-side carpals are quantitatively analyzed together as articulated units. Based on
previous descriptions as well as qualitative and quantitative analyses, Pan troglodytes
(chimpanzees), Pan paniscus (bonobos), and Gorilla gorilla gorilla (western lowland gorillas)
wrists were predicted to display features that facilitate radioulnar stability and
proximodistally-directed loading, which would be more efficient for locomotor behaviours.
Conversely, human wrists were predicted to display features that facilitate proximodistal stability
and radioulnarly-directed loading, which would be more efficient for manual dextrous
behaviours. Results showed that the combined shapes of these carpal bones, as well as their sizes
and orientations relative to each other, vary considerably between the African ape and human
samples. The African ape wrists showed, as predicted, a complex of features that provides
biomechanical advantages for withstanding and distributing forces directed proximodistally
during knuckle walking and other locomotor behaviours. In contrast, the human wrists displayed
a complex of features that appears to provide biomechanical advantages for withstanding and
distributing large forces directed radioulnarly during human-like power and precision grips.