“…Similarly, individual T17 has likely exercised great loading at push-off, similar to barefoot hunter-gatherers or those wearing minimalistic soft-coverings, though such an explanation is highly improbable as the sole explanation for our finding given the low mobility of hypochondroplasic individuals (Haga, 2004;Sims et al, 2019Sims et al, , 2020. Indeed, recent kinematic studies on the gait cycle have shown that individuals with achondroplasia walk at a slower speed have shorter stride lengths and higher frequencies of strides compared with a group of healthy individuals, largely because of the shorter, disproportionate leg length of the former (Sims et al, 2019(Sims et al, , 2020. High stride frequencies in T17 may be a contributing factor to the more robust (i.e., short and broad) talar neck likely due to higher load given more impacts per given distance, though kinematic studies on hypochondroplasic individuals would be necessary to test this hypothesis.…”