CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND—A new 3-D model of “Lucy,” an Australopithecus afarensis individual whose 3.2 million-year-old remains were discovered in Ethiopia in the 1970s, suggests that she could climb trees and stand and walk upright as modern humans do, according to a Live Science report. Ashleigh Wiseman of the University of Cambridge created a digital model of 36 muscles in each of Lucy’s legs, using modern human anatomy as a reference. She concluded that Lucy would have been able to straighten and flex her knee joints in a wide range of motion, and extend her hips in a bipedal walk, although the higher proportion of muscles to fat were more like a bonobo’s than a modern human’s. “Lucy likely walked and moved in a way that we do not see in any living species today,” Wiseman said, adding that her anatomy would have allowed A. afarensis to live in both forest and grassland habitats. Read the original scholarly article about this research in Royal Society Open Science. To read more about the ability of A. afarensis to walk upright, go to "'Kadanuumuu'," one of ARCHAEOLOGY's Top 10 Discoveries of 2010.
Could “Lucy” Walk Upright Like a Modern Human?
News June 15, 2023
SHARE:
Recommended Articles
Off the Grid January/February 2025
Tzintzuntzan, Mexico
Enrique/AdobeStock
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2025
Bad Moon Rising
Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2025
100-Foot Enigma
George E. Koronaios/Wikimedia Commons
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2025
Colonial Companions
NadiaPera/AdobeStock
-
Features May/June 2023
The Man in the Middle
How an ingenious royal official transformed Persian conquerors into proper Egyptian pharaohs
(© The Trustees of the British Museum) -
Letter from the American Southeast May/June 2023
Spartans of the Lower Mississippi
Unearthing evidence of defiance and resilience in the homeland of the Chickasaw
(Kimberly Wescott and Brad Lieb, Chickasaw Native Explorers Program 2015) -
Artifacts May/June 2023
Greek Kylix Fragments
(Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford) -
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2023
The Beauty of Bugs
(Michael Terlep)