%0 Journal Article %A Lukova, Andrea %A Bachmann, Sebastian %A Synek, Alexander %A Pahr, Dieter H. %A Kilbourne, Brandon %A Dunmore, Christopher J. %A Kivell, Tracy L. %A Skinner, Matthew M. %+ Department of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Max Planck Society Department of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Max Planck Society Department of Human Origins, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Max Planck Society %T Trabecular architecture of the proximal tibia in extant hominids : %G eng %U https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0011-7A1E-4 %R 10.1002/ajpa.70084 %7 2025-06-30 %D 2025 %* Review method: peer-reviewed %X Objectives: Extant humans and non-human apes are characterized by diverse locomotor and postural behaviors, resulting in
different joint loading patterns. These behaviors influence trabecular bone, which responds to mechanical loading and joint pos-
ture. While prior studies have examined femoral trabecular structure, this study is the first to assess trabecular architecture in
the proximal tibia across extant hominoids to evaluate how differences in joint use and posture are reflected in tibial morphology.
Materials and Methods: We analyze trabecular structure in the proximal tibiae of Homo sapiens (n = 25), Gorilla (n = 13),
Pan troglodytes (n = 15) and Pongo sp. (n = 7). Each tibia was scanned using high-resolution microtomography, and cortical and
trabecular bone were isolated from each other. Canonical holistic morphometric analysis was used to quantify trabecular bone
volume fraction and degree of anisotropy. Spatial distributions of these variables were compared across taxa using principal com-
ponent analysis, and group differences were assessed with multivariate analysis of variance and pairwise tests.
Results: Results show that trabecular bone volume and anisotropy reflect habitual knee posture: extended in bipedal Homo, and
flexed in non-human apes. In Gorilla, males exhibit more extended knee use than females, while no significant sex differences
were observed in Homo or Pan (sex differences in Pongo were not tested due to sample limitations).
Discussion: We demonstrate that the trabecular structure of the proximal tibia is consistent with habitual locomotor loading in
extant hominids, which provides the comparative context to interpret knee posture, biomechanical loading, and predominant
locomotor behaviors in fossil hominids. %K bipedalism, functional morphology, Gorilla, human, knee, locomotor behavior, Pan, Pongo %J American Journal of Biological Anthropology %V 187 %N 3 %] e70084 %@ 2692-76912692-7691