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Shaft structure of the first metatarsal contains a strong phylogenetic signal in apes and humans.

Yuma TomizawaMasato NakatsukasaMarcia S Ponce de LeónChristoph P E ZollikoferNaoki Morimoto
Published in: American journal of biological anthropology (2024)
Given the importance of the first metatarsal for grasping and bipedal/quadrupedal locomotion, the strong phylogenetic but weak functional signal in its structure is unexpected. These findings suggest that the evolutionary diversification of hominoid locomotor behaviors, including human bipedality, is only partly reflected in form-function relationships of key skeletal elements, and that phylogenetic history acted as a major evolutionary constraint.
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