ProjectUntersuchung der Ursprünge des menschenähnlichen Werkzeuggebrauchs durch die Kombination von funktioneller…

Basic data

Title:
Untersuchung der Ursprünge des menschenähnlichen Werkzeuggebrauchs durch die Kombination von funktioneller Morphologie und Muskel-Skelett-Modellierung
Duration:
01/01/2026 to 31/12/2028
Abstract / short description:
This project aims to shed new light on the evolutionary factors that led to the emergence of one of humanity’s defining behavioral
characteristics: human-like tool use. To achieve this, we will focus on tracing skeletal evidence for one of the most fundamental transitions in the early hominin record, involving the introduction of habitual cutting via the fine manipulation of small stone flakes. We hypothesize that at least some early fossil hominin individuals will exhibit direct evidence of habitual and precise cutting behaviors (based on phenotypic plasticity), regardless of their degree of evolved dexterity (biomechanical efficiency). Furthermore, if adapting this manual behavior represented a considerable evolutionary advantage, we expect later hominin species to show both increased frequency and evolved dexterity for this task. To address these hypotheses, we will build upon our previously developed interdisciplinary approaches integrating hand musculoskeletal modeling with the 3D morphometric analysis of functional morphology, while relying on our existing experimental data pinpointing the exact functional requirements of human-like stone flake cutting. Our comparative materials comprise a wide range of fossil hominin specimens combined with a diverse and well-preserved sample of extant primate species (i.e., chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans, macaques, and extensively documented modern humans).

Involved staff

Managers

Institute of Archaeological Sciences Research Areas (UFG)
Department of Geoscience, Faculty of Science

Other staff

Department of Geoscience
Faculty of Science
Institute of Archaeological Sciences Research Areas (UFG)
Department of Geoscience, Faculty of Science

Local organizational units

Institute for Archaeological Sciences (INA)
Interfaculty Institutes
University of Tübingen

Funders

Bonn, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany
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