DOI: 10.32469/10355/44674
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3D analysis of hip joint mobility and the evolution of locomotor abilities in miocene hominoids

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Cited by 9 publications
(36 citation statements)
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References 390 publications
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“…External rotation and hip abduction have been previously identified as key movements associated with arboreal versatility (Hammond, 2013; 2014a; b). Our data does not find a significant difference in external rotation between captive and free-ranging macaques, supporting earlier work which found that captive macaques do not achieve external rotation as large as more acrobatic taxa such as hominoids and spider monkeys (Hammond, 2014a).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…External rotation and hip abduction have been previously identified as key movements associated with arboreal versatility (Hammond, 2013; 2014a; b). Our data does not find a significant difference in external rotation between captive and free-ranging macaques, supporting earlier work which found that captive macaques do not achieve external rotation as large as more acrobatic taxa such as hominoids and spider monkeys (Hammond, 2014a).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We sampled 39 Indian-derived rhesus macaques (37 males, 4.2-15.8 years; 2 females, 9.2-11 years) on Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico (see Supporting Information Table 1). The captive sample consisted of published data for 16 rhesus macaques (8 males, 8.8-9.3 years; 8 females, 8.6-9.5 years) from the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center (WNPC) (Hammond, 2013(Hammond, , 2014a. All macaques sampled in this study are believed to be skeletally adult based on known epiphyseal fusion ages for the pelvis and proximal femur for both Cayo Santiago (Cheverud, 1981) and laboratory-housed (Van Wagenen & Asling, 1958) rhesus macaques (see Supporting Information Table 2 and Figure 1).…”
Section: Study Sample and Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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