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Letters to Nature

Nature 369, 645-648 (23 June 1994) | doi:10.1038/369645a0; Accepted 25 May 1994

Implications of early hominid labyrinthine morphology for evolution of human bipedal locomotion

Fred Spoor*†, Bernard Wood* & Frans Zonneveld

  1. * Hominid Palaeontology Research Group, Department of Human Anatomy and Cell Biology, PO Box 147, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3BX, UK
  2. Department of Radiology, Utrecht University Hospital, Utrecht The Netherlands
  3. Present address: Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, University College London, Rockefeller Building, University Street, London WC1E 6JJ, UK.
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THE upright posture and obligatory bipedalism of modern humans are unique among living primates. The evolutionary history of this behaviour has traditionally been pursued by functional analysis of the postcranial skeleton and the preserved footprint trails of fossil hominids. Here we report a systematic attempt to reconstruct the locomotor behaviour of early hominids by looking at a major component of the mechanism for the unconscious perception of movement, namely by examining the vestibular system of living primates and early hominids. High-resolution computed tomography was used to generate cross-sectional images of the bony labyrinth. Among the fossil hominids the earliest species to demonstrate the modern human morphology is Homo erectus. In contrast, the semicircular canal dimensions in crania from southern Africa attributed to Australopithecus and Paranthropus resemble those of the extant great apes. Among early Homo specimens, the canal dimensions of Stw 53 are unlike those seen in any of the hominids or great apes, whereas those of SK 847 are modern-human-like