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      A female Homo erectus pelvis from Gona, Ethiopia.

      Science (New York, N.Y.)
      Adaptation, Biological, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Biological Evolution, Body Height, Body Size, Brain, anatomy & histology, embryology, Environment, Ethiopia, Female, Fossils, Hominidae, physiology, Humans, Locomotion, Lumbar Vertebrae, Parturition, Pelvic Bones, Pelvis, Sacrum

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          Abstract

          Analyses of the KNM-WT 15000 Homo erectus juvenile male partial skeleton from Kenya concluded that this species had a tall thin body shape due to specialized locomotor and climatic adaptations. Moreover, it was concluded that H. erectus pelves were obstetrically restricted to birthing a small-brained altricial neonate. Here we describe a nearly complete early Pleistocene adult female H. erectus pelvis from the Busidima Formation of Gona, Afar, Ethiopia. This obstetrically capacious pelvis demonstrates that pelvic shape in H. erectus was evolving in response to increasing fetal brain size. This pelvis indicates that neither adaptations to tropical environments nor endurance running were primary selective factors in determining pelvis morphology in H. erectus during the early Pleistocene.

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