| It’s a shoe-in: footwear catches on 40-26K years ago |
|
| by William Atkins | |
| Tuesday, 29 January 2008 | |
|
Erik Trinkaus, Department of Anthropology of Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, and Shang Hong, of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology in the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China, studied a 40,000-year-old skeleton found in Tianyuan Cave near Zhoukoudian, China. What was unique about this skeleton was that the small toe bones were still intact, something that is not usually found. They also studied other foot bones from ancient Native Americans, Puebloan and Alaskan Inuit skeletons, a 27,500-year-old Russian skeleton with middle toe bones still present, and Neanderthal and early human skeletons. Shoes were known to have been worn about 12,000 years ago. Some of them consisted of string attached to the feet, what scientists call rope sandals. Others were no more than protection for the feet to insulate them and to cover them from the cold. These early forms of shoes did not change how humans walked when compared to going barefoot. Rugged shoes, however, reduced the need for the toes to grip and balance, and they became weaker and less flexible, especially the lesser toes, all of the toes except the big toe. Scientists can study the bones in the feet because they change over time depending on whether people wear shoes or go barefoot. Walking barefoot causes the middle toes to curl into the ground in order to balance oneself and to provide better traction.
However, wearing shoes makes the big toe work harder. It is the one that primarily is used for pushing off while walking and to provide more traction and balance.
Get stories like this delivered daily - FREE - subscribe now
|
| < Next story in category | Previous story in the category > |
|---|

TAG 
Tags




