“…In the field of evolutionary morphology, geometric morphometric methods (GM) have transformed the ways in which evolutionary biologists study form (Kendall, 1977;Bookstein, 1991;Slice, 2005;Adams et al, 2013). In functional anatomy, finite element analysis (FEA) has become increasingly important for testing hypotheses in human and non-human primate evolutionary biomechanics (Macho et al, 2005;Marinescu et al, 2005;Strait et al, 2005Strait et al, , 2007Strait et al, , 2008Strait et al, , 2009Strait et al, , 2013Kupczik et al, 2007Kupczik et al, , 2009Wroe et al, 2007;Wang et al, 2008Wang et al, , 2010aWang et al, ,b, 2012Gr⏠oning et al, 2009;Berthaume, 2010;Panagiotopoulou, 2010Panagiotopoulou, , 2011aBenazzi et al, 2011a;2013a,b,c;Chalk et al, 2011;Dumont et al, 2011a,b;Nakashige et al, 2011;O'Higgins et al, 2011;Ross et al, 2011;Wood et al, 2011) and vertebrate biology in general (Guillet et al, 1985;Rayfield et al, 2001;Rayfield, 2004Rayfield, , 2005Rayfield, , 2011Dumont et al, 2005Dumont et al, , 2009Metzger et al, 2005;Witzel, 2004;McHenry et al, 2006McHenry et al, , 2007…”