john hawks weblog

paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

osteology

  • Structure of the pelvis

    Mon, 2011-10-31 23:10 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    Laboratory exercise introducing the bones of the pelvis.

    The pelvis is a complex made of three bones: the sacrum and the left and right os coxae, also called "innominate" bones. The sacrum forms the posterior part of the pelvis, and is made up of fused vertebrae. Many primates have a tail extending from the end of the sacrum; humans and apes have only a small number of tiny vertebral bodies, called the coccyx, or ``tailbone.''

    The innominate bones (os coxae) make up the sides and the front of the pelvis. Each innominate bone is itself composed of three fused bones:

    Ilium
    The largest part of the innominate bone, this forms the upper blade, which flares outward to make a bowl-shaped cavity supporting the abdominal organs.
    Ischium
    The ischium is the most inferior part of the pelvis, the part that most primates sit on.
    Pubis
    The pubis is in the front of the pelvis. The two pubes meet at the midline at the pubic symphysis.

    The three bones meet in the center of the socket for the hip joint, called the acetabulum. The bones fuse together during childhood, so that adults do not have any marking showing the boundaries between them.

    A few other features of the innominate bones give important information about sex or locomotion.

    What to do: Take some time to orient yourself on the pelves at this station. Be sure to be able to identify the acetabulum, pubic symphysis, and the sacrum, ilium, ischium and pubis.

  • Sexual dimorphism of the pelvis

    Mon, 2011-10-31 22:41 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    Laboratory exercise devoted to pelvic features that vary by sex.

    The pelvis is the most accurate indicator of sex in the human skeleton. Its central role in the birth process means that the pelvis has several shape differences between females and males. Learning these features is one of the fundamental bases of forensic identification.

    The lower part of the pelvis, called the true pelvis, contains the birth canal in females. The top of the true pelvis is defined by the pelvic inlet. The pelvic inlet is nearly circular in females, more oblong in males. The pelvis of males is overall larger, because the ilia (top part of the innominate bones) flare more extensively and the sacrum is longer.

    The other features of the female pelvis tend to increase the size of the pelvic outlet, the space at the bottom through which the birth canal passes. Both pelvic bones and the sacrum have several shape differences in this area between males and females.

    Pubis
    The anterior portions of the pelvic bones, called the pubes, comes together at the pubic symphysis. The inferior borders of the pubes form an angle, which is wider (around 90 degrees) in females, narrower (around 60 degrees) in males.
    Greater sciatic notch
    On the posterior border of each innominate bone, the greater sciatic notch is wider in females, narrower in males.
    Sacrum
    Wider and shorter, with less curvature in females. Longer and more curved in males.

    What to do: Examine the male and female pelves at this station. Use the other bones here to examine features related to sexual dimorphism. Try to identify male and female bones. Try seriating the bones to examine how the variation of different characteristics are related to each other.

    Then go to one of the other tables, where pelvic bones have been arranged for you to determine sex. At that table, use the features of each bone to determine whether it is likely male or female. Write down the total number of male and female specimens in your determination, and leave those numbers with your TA.

  • Radius and ulna

    Mon, 2011-09-26 10:49 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    A lab exercise to learn the anatomy of the bones of the lower arm.

    The radius and ulna are the two bones of the lower arm. Rotation of the wrist is actually accomplished by a rotation of the radius around the ulna. The radius is on the lateral side of the arm, while the ulna is medial.

    The radius can turn at the elbow joint, and therefore the part of the radius that articulates with the humerus, called the radial head, has a rounded circumference that allows it to rotate in contact with the proximal ulna. The radius has a large tuberosity on the front, toward the medial side.

    The proximal ulna has a large notch bounded by two bony processes. The olecranon process fits into the olecranon fossa of the humerus, while the coronoid process fits against the anterior surface of the humerus when the elbow is flexed. Between these two processes, a half-moon shaped notch, called the semilunar or trochlear notch, fits strongly around the trochlea of the humerus, creating a stable and strong hinge joint to counter the weak but rotating joint of the radius. The proximal ulna has a notch for the radial head, called the radial notch, which is on the lateral side of the ulna.

    At the distal end, most of the proximal wrist joint is occupied by the distal radius, with the distal ulna free to rotate relative to the wrist. Both bones have pointed styloid processes, which extend on the medial and lateral sides of the wrist.

    What to do: At this station are many right and left radii and ulnae, including some fragmentary bones. Use your time to learn well how to tell right and left apart.

  • Humerus

    Mon, 2011-09-26 09:46 -- John Hawks
    Synopsis: 
    A lab introduction to the anatomy of the humerus.

    The bone of the upper arm is called the humerus. It articulates with the scapula at the shoulder joint, and the radius and ulna at the elbow.

    The proximal end of the humerus is dominated by a half-spherical articular surface, called the head, that forms the ball of the ball-and-socket joint of the shoulder. The head points medially into the shoulder joint. On the lateral side, a bump called the greater tubercle projects proximally.

    The distal end of the humerus has two articular surfaces. The first of these, called the trochlea, is a pulley-shaped surface that accommodates the ulna. The other, called the capitulum, is a small spherical structure lateral to the trochlea that articulates with the head of the radius. The capitulum is on the lateral side, the trochlea is medial.

    On the posterior surface, above the trochlea is a large dent, called the olecranon fossa. The proximal end of the ulna fits into this fossa when the elbow is extended.

    What to do: At this station are many right and left humeri, including some fragmentary bones. Work on telling right and left humeri from each other. You will find the distal end of the bone very helpful, with the trochlea medial and capitulum lateral, and the olecranon fossa on the posterior aspect.

  • Muscle markings, chimpanzees, and Neandertals

    Thu, 2009-02-26 09:23 -- John Hawks

    Earlier, I pointed to my new article in Slate, about chimpanzee strength compared to humans. For anthropologists, I thought I might point to a passage in one of John Bauman's articles (1926:7-9), which raises a point I remember well from graduate school:

    The last question raised by the strength of the chimpanzee seems to have been completely overlooked in the past. All anatomists place reliance upon the relative development of the various muscle attachment ridges and pits on the bones as a trustworthy indication of the strength of the owner.

    Yet anyone who will take the trouble to compare carefully the crest of the ilium of the chimpanzee with that of the human being will notice that the muscle attachment roughnesses are very markedly less prominent in the former than in the latter, yet Suzette's pulls have clearly demonstrated an immense superiority in strength of the lumbar region in the ape. Also with regard to long sustained action, a short time spent in the anthropoidal posture will convince any person that this posture calls for more taxing long sustained action of the lumbar muscles than does the erect posture of the human being.

    We certainly can not look to man's erect posture for an explanation of the smooth sharp rim of the hip bone in the anthropoid ape, why then do the usually so reliable muscle attachments fail here to correctly indicate relative strength? The discrepancy is an extremely pronounced, not a trifling one, moreover.

    Bauman then generalized to Neandertals:

    And finally, how about those interesting Neanderthal men? We customarily base our estimate of their probable strength upon the degree of prominence of their muscle attachments as observed in the fossil bones-but should not the above consideration incline us toward caution in this class of inferences, particularly when the subjects are an ancient race known to have approximated closely to the anthropoidal type in their anatomy--as well as impel the comparative anatomist to a thorough investigation into the reason for this strange discrepancy.

    The hip is not a great example, because of the architectural difference between the human and ape pelvis. Still, we can make the same general observation about other bones like the humerus, on which muscle attachments don't convey the information about relative chimpanzee strength.

    Pronounced muscle attachment sites are not evidence that Neandertals were weak; within the context of recent hominids the rugosities and robusticity of bones are probably good indicators of muscle mass. But with some increasing evidence for evolution of muscle functional properties on the human lineage, I hesitate to assume that any Pleistocene human muscles interacted with their bony attachments in exactly the same way as ours.

    The muscle attachment issue may be especially confusing in Australopithecus, where there is a substantial contrast within species between small individuals like AL 288-1 and larger individuals -- the Maka humerus comes to mind. Here's the comparison, from White et al. (1993):

    Maka (top) and AL 288-1 humeri, from White et al. 1993

    Maka is the heavily-crested humerus at the top, Lucy's slender and smooth humerus underneath. Straightforward mass difference? Or difference in activity pattern? Or both? This is not such an unusual comparison considering the variability in living hominoids, including people. But it illustrates well the kind of range of muscle marking and cresting that existed in fossil populations. The changes during human evolution would have happened upon this underlying pattern of broad variation.

    We can probably assume it's not the functional properties of muscle differing between these two specimens. But what about between Australopithecus and Homo? Or Neandertal to recent human? We already know there are differences in muscle function among human populations, in part corresponding to alpha actinin-3 allele frequencies. Genetics may be starting to make the "expensive tissue" story come down to muscle instead of gut reduction -- if I'm going to make predictions, I would say that MYH16 will not long be alone as a gene corresponding to human muscle reduction.

    References:

    Bauman JE. 1926. Observations of the strength of the chimpanzee and its implications. J Mammal 7:1-9. JSTOR

    White TD, Suwa G, Hart WK, Walter RC, WoldeGabriel G, de Heinzelin J, Clark JD, Asfaw B, Vrba E. 1993. New discoveries of Australopithecus at Maka in Ethiopia. Nature 366:261-265.

Subscribe to osteology

Neandertals

For years, I've worked on their bones. Now I'm working on their genes. Read more about the science studying these ancient people.

Denisova

From a finger bone of an ancient human came the record of a completely unexpected population. My lab is working on the science of the Denisova genome.

Acceleration

The advent of agriculture caused natural selection to speed up greatly in humans. We're uncovering some of the ways that populations have rapidly changed during the last 10,000 years.

Malapa

Just outside Johannesburg, the Malapa site is producing some of the most exciting finds in human evolution. This site is the headquarters of the Malapa Soft Tissue Project.