https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbioe.2023.1155439/full Mobility of the human foot’s medial arch helps enable upright
bipedal locomotion
Front. Bioeng. Biotechnol., 30 May 2023
Developing the ability to habitually walk and run upright
on two feet is one of the most significant transformations
to have occurred in human evolution. Many musculoskeletal
adaptations enabled bipedal locomotion, including dramatic
structural changes to the foot and, in particular, the
evolution of an elevated medial arch. The foot’s arched
structure has previously been assumed to play a central
role in directly propelling the center of mass forward and
upward through leverage about the toes and a spring-like
energy recoil. However, it is unclear whether or how the
plantarflexion mobility and height of the medial arch
support its propulsive lever function. We use high-speed
biplanar x-ray measurements of foot bone motion on seven
participants while walking and running and compare their
motion to a subject-specific model without arch recoil. We
show that regardless of intraspecific differences in medial
arch height, arch recoil enables a longer contact time and
favorable propulsive conditions at the ankle for walking
upright on an extended leg. The generally overlooked
navicular-medial cuneiform joint is primarily responsible
for arch recoil in human arches. The mechanism through
which arch recoil enables an upright ankle posture may have
helped drive the evolution of the longitudinal arch after
our last common ancestor with chimpanzees, who lack arch
plantarflexion mobility during push-off. Future
morphological investigations of the navicular-medial
cuneiform joint will likely provide new interpretations of
the fossil record. Our work further suggests that enabling
medial arch recoil in footwear and surgical interventions
may be critical for maintaining the ankle’s natural
propulsive ability.
Op maandag 12 juni 2023 om 06:43:27 UTC+2 schreef Primum Sapienti:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbioe.2023.1155439/full Mobility of the human foot’s medial arch helps enable uprightI thought I had already answered this (becoming a bit old?):
bipedal locomotion
Front. Bioeng. Biotechnol., 30 May 2023
this paper is a *perfect* confirmation of what we're saying :-)
Homo evolution:
-- Pliocene ancestors, google "aquarboreal": wading+climbing
-- H.erectus, google "pachyosteosclerosis": wading+diving,
-- late-Pleist.H.sapiens "coastal dispersal": wading+walking.
____
Developing the ability to habitually walk and run upright
on two feet is one of the most significant transformations
to have occurred in human evolution. Many musculoskeletal
adaptations enabled bipedal locomotion, including dramatic
structural changes to the foot and, in particular, the
evolution of an elevated medial arch. The foot’s arched
structure has previously been assumed to play a central
role in directly propelling the center of mass forward and
upward through leverage about the toes and a spring-like
energy recoil. However, it is unclear whether or how the
plantarflexion mobility and height of the medial arch
support its propulsive lever function. We use high-speed
biplanar x-ray measurements of foot bone motion on seven
participants while walking and running and compare their
motion to a subject-specific model without arch recoil. We
show that regardless of intraspecific differences in medial
arch height, arch recoil enables a longer contact time and
favorable propulsive conditions at the ankle for walking
upright on an extended leg. The generally overlooked
navicular-medial cuneiform joint is primarily responsible
for arch recoil in human arches. The mechanism through
which arch recoil enables an upright ankle posture may have
helped drive the evolution of the longitudinal arch after
our last common ancestor with chimpanzees, who lack arch
plantarflexion mobility during push-off. Future
morphological investigations of the navicular-medial
cuneiform joint will likely provide new interpretations of
the fossil record. Our work further suggests that enabling
medial arch recoil in footwear and surgical interventions
may be critical for maintaining the ankle’s natural
propulsive ability.
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbioe.2023.1155439/full Mobility of the human foot’s medial arch helps enable uprightI thought I had already answered this (becoming a bit old?):
bipedal locomotion
Front. Bioeng. Biotechnol., 30 May 2023
this paper is a *perfect* confirmation of what we're saying :-)
Homo evolution:
-- Pliocene ancestors, google "aquarboreal": wading+climbing
-- H.erectus, google "pachyosteosclerosis": wading+diving,
-- late-Pleist.H.sapiens "coastal dispersal": wading+walking.
Developing the ability to habitually walk and run upright
on 2 feet is one of the most significant transformations
to have occurred in human evolution.
Many musculoskeletal
adaptations enabled bipedal locomotion, including dramatic
structural changes to the foot and, in particular, the
evolution of an elevated medial arch. ...
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