Postcranial robusticity in Homo. II: Humeral bilateral asymmetry and bone plasticity
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Physical Anthropology
- Vol. 93 (1) , 1-34
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330930102
Abstract
The analysis of humeral asymmetry in Recent human skeletal samples and an extant tennis‐player sample documents minimal asymmetry in bone length, little asymmetry in distal humeral articular breadth, but pronounced and variable asymmetry in mid‐ and distal diaphyseal crosssectional geometric parameters. More specifically, skeletal samples of normal modern Euroamericans, prehistoric and early historic Amerindians, and prehistoric Japanese show moderate (ca. 5–14%) median asymmetry in diaphyseal cross‐sectional areas and polar second moments of area, whereas the tennis‐player sample, with pronounced unilateral physical activity, exhibits median asymmetries of 28–57% in the same parameters. A sample of Neandertals with nonpathological upper limbs exhibits similarly low articular asymmetry but pronounced diaphyseal asymmetries, averaging 24–57%. In addition, three Neandertals with actual or possible post‐traumatic upper limb alterations have the same low articular asymmetry but extremely high diaphyseal asymmetries, averaging 112–215%. These data support those from experimental work on animals, exercise programs of humans, and human clinical contexts in establishing the high degree of diaphyseal plasticity possible for humans, past and present, under changing biomechanical loading conditions. This lends support to activity‐related functional interpretations of changing human diaphyseal morphology and robusticity during the Pleistocene.Keywords
This publication has 84 references indexed in Scilit:
- Robusticity versus Shape: The Functional Interpretation of Neandertal Appendicular Morphology.Journal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon, 1991
- Health Effects of Recreational Running in WomenSports Medicine, 1991
- Effect of Physical Activity on Lumbar Spine and Femoral Neck Bone DensitiesInternational Journal of Sports Medicine, 1989
- Cross-sectional properties along the diaphysis of the rat femur as influenced by forced running exercise.Journal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon, 1987
- Dynamic strain similarity in vertebrates; an alternative to allometric limb bone scalingJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1984
- Some mechanical properties of goose femoral cortical boneJournal of Biomechanics, 1983
- Problems of sampling and inference in the study of fluctuating dental asymmetryAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1982
- Mechanically adaptive bone remodellingJournal of Biomechanics, 1982
- The throw: biomechanics and acute injuryThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 1980
- Osteoporosis in HemiplegiaStroke, 1971