Bernhard Zipfel

University Curator of Fossil and Rock Collections

Recent origin of low trabecular bone density in modern humans


Journal article


H. Chirchir, T. Kivell, C. Ruff, J. Hublin, K. Carlson, B. Zipfel, B. Richmond
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2014

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Chirchir, H., Kivell, T., Ruff, C., Hublin, J., Carlson, K., Zipfel, B., & Richmond, B. (2014). Recent origin of low trabecular bone density in modern humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Chirchir, H., T. Kivell, C. Ruff, J. Hublin, K. Carlson, B. Zipfel, and B. Richmond. “Recent Origin of Low Trabecular Bone Density in Modern Humans.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2014).


MLA   Click to copy
Chirchir, H., et al. “Recent Origin of Low Trabecular Bone Density in Modern Humans.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2014.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{h2014a,
  title = {Recent origin of low trabecular bone density in modern humans},
  year = {2014},
  journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences},
  author = {Chirchir, H. and Kivell, T. and Ruff, C. and Hublin, J. and Carlson, K. and Zipfel, B. and Richmond, B.}
}

Abstract

Significance The human skeleton is unique in having low trabecular density representing a lightly built human body form. However, it remains unknown when during human evolution this unique characteristic first appeared. To our knowledge, this study is the first to examine trabecular bone density throughout the skeleton of fossil hominins spanning several million years. The results show that trabecular density remained high throughout human evolution until it decreased significantly in recent modern humans, suggesting a possible link between changes in our skeleton and increased sedentism. Humans are unique, compared with our closest living relatives (chimpanzees) and early fossil hominins, in having an enlarged body size and lower limb joint surfaces in combination with a relatively gracile skeleton (i.e., lower bone mass for our body size). Some analyses have observed that in at least a few anatomical regions modern humans today appear to have relatively low trabecular density, but little is known about how that density varies throughout the human skeleton and across species or how and when the present trabecular patterns emerged over the course of human evolution. Here, we test the hypotheses that (i) recent modern humans have low trabecular density throughout the upper and lower limbs compared with other primate taxa and (ii) the reduction in trabecular density first occurred in early Homo erectus, consistent with the shift toward a modern human locomotor anatomy, or more recently in concert with diaphyseal gracilization in Holocene humans. We used peripheral quantitative CT and microtomography to measure trabecular bone of limb epiphyses (long bone articular ends) in modern humans and chimpanzees and in fossil hominins attributed to Australopithecus africanus, Paranthropus robustus/early Homo from Swartkrans, Homo neanderthalensis, and early Homo sapiens. Results show that only recent modern humans have low trabecular density throughout the limb joints. Extinct hominins, including pre-Holocene Homo sapiens, retain the high levels seen in nonhuman primates. Thus, the low trabecular density of the recent modern human skeleton evolved late in our evolutionary history, potentially resulting from increased sedentism and reliance on technological and cultural innovations.