Everything about Australopithecus Afarensis totally explained
Australopithecus afarensis is an extinct
hominid which lived between 3.9 and 2.9 million years ago. In common with the younger
Australopithecus africanus,
A. afarensis was slenderly built. From analysis it has been thought that
A. afarensis was ancestral to both the genus
Australopithecus and the genus
Homo, which includes the modern human species,
Homo sapiens..
Localities
Australopithecus afarensis fossils have only been discovered within
eastern Africa. Despite Laetoli being the
type locality for
A. afarensis, the most extensive remains assigned to this species are found in Hadar,
Ethiopia, including the famous "Lucy" partial skeleton and the "First Family" found at the A.L. 333 locality. Other localities bearing
A. afarensis remains include Omo, Maka, Fejej and Belohdelie in
Ethiopia, and
Koobi Fora and Lothagam in
Kenya.
Physical characteristics
Craniodental features and Brain Size
Compared to the modern and extinct great
apes,
A. afarensis has reduced canines and molars, although they're still relatively larger than in modern humans.
A. afarensis also had a relatively small
brain size (~380-430cm³) and a prognathic (for example projecting anteriorly) face.
The image of a
bipedal hominin with a small brain and primitive face was quite a revelation to the paleoanthropological world at the time. This was due to the earlier belief that an increase in brain size was the first major hominin adaptive shift. Before the discoveries of
A. afarensis in the 1970s, it was widely thought that an increase in brain size preceded the shift to bipedal locomotion. This was mainly due to the fact that the oldest known hominins at the time had relatively large brains (e.g KNM-ER 1470,
Homo rudolfensis, which was found just a few years before Lucy and had a cranial capacity of ~800cm³).
Bipedalism
There is considerable debate regarding the locomotor behaviour of
A. afarensis. Some believe that
A. afarensis was almost exclusively bipedal, while others believe that the creatures were partly arboreal. The anatomy of the hands, feet and shoulder joints in many ways favour the latter interpretation. The curvature of the finger and toe bones (
Phalanges) approaches that of modern-day apes, and is most likely reflective of their ability to efficiently grasp branches and climb. The presence of a wrist-locking mechanism might suggest that they were knuckle-walkers. The shoulder joint is also oriented more cranially (for example towards the skull) than in modern humans. Combined with the relatively long arms
A. afarensis are thought to have had, this is thought by many to be reflective of a heightened ability to use the arm above the head in climbing behaviour. Furthermore, scans of the skulls reveal a canal and bony labyrinth morphology, which some suggest isn't conducive to proper bipedal locomotion.
However, there are also a number of traits in the
A. afarensis skeleton which strongly reflect bipedalism. In overall anatomy, the pelvis is far more human-like than ape-like. The iliac blades are short and wide, the sacrum is wide and positioned directly behind the hip joint, and there's clear evidence of a strong attachment for the
knee extensors. While the
pelvis isn't wholly human-like (being markedly wide with flared with laterally orientated iliac blades), these features point to a structure that can be considered radically remodeled to accommodate a significant degree of
bipedalism in the animals' locomotor repertoire. Importantly, the
femur also angles in toward the
knee from the
hip. This trait would have allowed the
foot to have fallen closer to the midline of the body, and is a strong indication of habitual bipedal locomotion. Along with
humans, present day
orangutans and
spider monkeys possess this same feature. The feet also feature
adducted big toes, making it difficult if not impossible to grasp branches with the
hindlimbs. The loss of a grasping hindlimb also increases the risk of an infant being dropped or falling, as primates typically hold onto their mothers while the mother goes about her daily business. Without the second set of grasping limbs, the infant can't maintain as strong a grip, and likely had to be held with help from the mother. The problem of holding the infant would be multiplied if the mother also had to climb trees. The
ankle joint of
A. afarensis is also markedly human-like.
Computer simulations using
dynamic modelling of the skeleton's
inertial properties and
kinematics have indicated that
A. afarensis was able to walk in the same way modern humans walk, with a normal erect gait or with bent hips and knees, but couldn't walk in the same way as
chimpanzees. The upright gait would have been much more efficient than the bent knee and hip walking, which would have taken twice as much energy. It appears probable that
A. afarensis was quite an efficient bipedal walker over short distances, and the spacing of the footprints at
Laetoli indicates that they were walking at 1.0 m/s or above, which matches human small-town walking speeds.
It is commonly thought that upright bipedal walking evolved from knuckle-walking with bent legs, in the manner used by chimpanzees and
gorillas to move around on the ground, but fossils such as
Orrorin tugenensis indicate bipedalism around 5 to 8 million years ago, in the same general period where genetic studies suggest the lineage of chimpanzees and humans diverged. Modern apes and their fossil ancestors show skeletal adaptations to an upright posture used in tree climbing, and it has been proposed that that upright, straight-legged walking originally evolved as an adaptation to tree-dwelling. Studies of modern
orangutans in
Sumatra have shown these apes using four legs when walking on large stable branches and when swinging underneath slightly smaller branches, but are bipedal and maintain their legs very straight when using multiple small flexible branches under 4 cm. in diameter while also using their arms for balance and additional support. This enables them to get nearer to the edge of the tree canopy to grasp fruit or cross to another tree.
Climate changes around 11 to 12 million years ago affected forests in East and Central Africa, establishing periods where openings prevented travel through the tree canopy, and during these times ancestral hominids could have adapted the upright walking behaviour for ground travel, while the ancestors of gorillas and chimpanzees became more specialised in climbing vertical tree trunks or lianas with a bent hip and bent knee posture, ultimately leading them to use the related knuckle-walking posture for ground travel. This would lead to
A. afarensis usage of upright bipedalism for ground travel, while still having arms well adapted for climbing smaller trees. However, chimpanzees and gorillas are the closest living relatives to humans, and share anatomical features including a fused wrist bone which may also suggest knuckle-walking by human ancestors. Other studies suggest that an upright spine and a primarily vertical body plan in primates dates back to
Morotopithecus bishopi in the
Early Miocene of 21.6 million years ago
Social characteristics
It is difficult to predict the social behaviour of extinct fossil species. However, the social structure of modern apes and monkeys can be anticipated to some extent by the average range of body size between males and females (known as
sexual dimorphism). Although there's considerable debate over how large the degree of sexual dimorphism was between males and females of
A. afarensis, it's likely that males were relatively larger than females. If observations on the relationship between sexual dimorphism and social group structure from modern great apes are applied to
A. afarensis then these creatures most likely lived in small family groups containing a single dominant male and a number of breeding females. and this conclusion was widely accepted. However, in 2006 scientists Yoel Rak, Avishag Ginzburg, and Eli Geffen carried out a morphological analysis which found that the
mandibular ramus (jawbone) of
australopithecus afarensis specimen A. L. 822-1 discovered in 2002 closely matches that of a gorilla, and from further studies they concluded that "australopithecus afarensis" is more likely a member of the
robust australopithecines branch of the hominid evolutionary tree and so not a direct ancestor of man. They concluded that
Ardipithecus ramidus discovered by White and colleagues in the 1990s is a more likely ancestor of the human
clade.
Notable Fossils
Type specimen
The
type specimen for
A. afarensis is
LH 4, an adult mandible from the site of
Laetoli,
Tanzania.
AL 129-1
The first
A. afarensis knee joint was discovered in November 1973 by
Donald Johanson as part of a team involving
Maurice Taieb,
Yves Coppens and
Tim White in the
Middle Awash of
Ethiopia's
Afar Depression.
Lucy
The first
A. afarensis skeleton was discovered on
November 24,
1974 near Hadar in Ethiopia by
Tom Gray in the company of
Donald Johanson, as part of a team involving
Maurice Taieb,
Yves Coppens and
Tim White in the
Middle Awash of
Ethiopia's
Afar Depression.
Site 333
Michael Bush, one of Don Johanson's students, made another major discovery in 1975: near Lucy, on the other side of the hill, he found the "First Family", including 200 fragments of
A. afarensis. The site of the findings is now known as "
site 333", by a count of fossil fragments uncovered, such as teeth and pieces of jaw. 13 individuals were uncovered and all were adults, with no injuries caused by carnivores. All 13 individuals seemed to have died at the same time, thus Johanson concluded that they might have been killed instantly from a flash flood.
Selam
September 20
2006,
Scientific American magazine presented the findings of a dig in Dikika,
Ethiopia, a few miles from the place where Lucy was found. The recovered skeleton of a 3-year-old
A. afarensis girl comprises almost the entire skull and torso, and most parts of the limbs. The features of the skeleton suggest adaptation to walking upright (
bipedalism) as well as tree-climbing, features that match the skeletal features of Lucy and fall midway between human and humanoid ape anatomy. "Baby Lucy" has officially been named "
Selam" (meaning
peace in most
Ethiopian languages).
(External Link
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Others
Related work
Further findings at Afar, including the many hominin bones in
site 333, produced more bones of concurrent date, and led to Johanson and White's eventual argument that the Koobi Fora hominins were concurrent with the Afar hominins. In other words, Lucy wasn't unique in evolving bipedalism and a flat face.
Recently, an entirely new species has been discovered, called
Kenyanthropus platyops, however the cranium
KNM WT 40000 has a much distorted matrix making it hard to distinguish (however a flat face is present). This had many of the same characteristics as Lucy, but is possibly an entirely different genus.
Another species, called
Ardipithecus ramidus, was found by White and colleagues in the 1990s. This was fully bipedal, yet appears to have been contemporaneous with a woodland environment, and, more importantly, contemporaneous with
Australopithecus afarensis. Scientists have not yet been able to draw an estimation of the
cranial capacity of
Ar. ramidus as only small jaw and leg fragments have been discovered thus far.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Australopithecus Afarensis'.
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