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1 in 13 people possess "ape-feet" ... do you?

T'Girl

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A resent small sample study at the Boston Museum of Science (published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology) of the feet of 398 visitors showed that 1 in 13 of the participants possess structures in their feet somewhat similar to the midtarsal break in the feet of chimpanzees and other apes.

This makes the middle part of the foot bend more easily as the subject pushes off to propel themselves on to their next step. This is what makes it easier for apes (and monkeys too) to move through trees.

If you place your thumb next to your index finger of curve your hand slightly, that what the study says that some people can do with their feet, but most can't.

I've always have been able to do this, as can all my brothers and sisters, and about a quarter to a third of my relatives on my father side of my family. No one on my mother's side apparent can.

How many here can curve their feet into a gripping shape?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22728014

Below is easier to read version of the article.

Scientists have discovered that about one in thirteen people have flexible ape-like feet.

A team studied the feet of 398 visitors to the Boston Museum of Science.

The results show differences in foot bone structure similar to those seen in fossils of a member of the human lineage from two million years ago.

It is hoped the research, published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, will establish how that creature moved.

Apes like the chimpanzee spend a lot of their time in trees, so their flexible feet are essential to grip branches and allow them to move around quickly - but how most of us ended up with more rigid feet remains unclear.

Jeremy DeSilva from Boston University and a colleague asked the museum visitors to walk barefoot and observed how they walked by using a mechanized carpet that was able to analyse several components of the foot. Floppy foot

Most of us have very rigid feet, helpful for stability, with stiff ligaments holding the bones in the foot together.

When primates lift their heels off the ground, however, they have a floppy foot with nothing holding their bones together.

This is known as a midtarsal break and is similar to what the Boston team identified in some of their participants.

This makes the middle part of the foot bend more easily as the subject pushes off to propel themselves on to their next step.

Dr DeSilva told BBC News how we might be able to observe whether we have this flexibility: "The best way to see this is if you're walking on the beach and leaving footprints, the middle portion of your footprint would have a big ridge that might show your foot is actually folding in that area."

Another way, he added, was to set up a video camera and record yourself walking, to observe the bones responsible for this folding motion.

Most with this flexibility did not realize they had it and there was no observable difference in the speed of their stride.

In addition, Dr DeSilva found that people with a flexible fold in their feet also roll to the inside of their foot as they walk.

The bone structure of a two-million-year old fossil human relative, Australopithecus sediba, suggests it also had this mobility.

"We are using variation in humans today as a model for understanding what this human creature two million years ago was doing," added Prof De Silva.

Tracy Kivell, a palaeoanthropologist from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, said: "The research has implications for how we interpret the fossil record and the evolution of these features.

"It's good to understand the normal variation among humans before we go figure out what it means in the fossil record," Dr Kivell told BBC News.
 
I can pick up just about anything with my feet, yes. If I'm barefoot, I can straighten rugs without stopping, while picking up one of my nephew's toys to throw in the toy bin, without using my hands. My OCD loves me for it.
 
I'm having a hard time telling if I fit the description. I certainly can do more things with my feet than I'd be willing to discuss.
 
I don't really understand this "test" to see if you have special feet or not, so I can't say whether or not I do. :)
 
I'm sure how I'm supposed to be able to tell. I can pick stuff up with my feet easily. So easily that I got upset with a scene in The Walking Dead season finale because I would have been out of that chair in a few minutes.
 
So ... does this mean that ape-footed people are less evolved?

If so, I'm claiming my place at the top of the evolutionary chain.
 
I tell people I have prehensile toes. I can pick up pretty much anything with them (anything not too big, anyway).
 
My feet aren't flexible at all. They're flat as pancakes; I literally have NO arches in my feet. They're less like ape feet and more like flippers.
 
I tell people I have prehensile toes. I can pick up pretty much anything with them (anything not too big, anyway).

I've used that exact same phrase, for the same reason. Unfortunately, having plantar fasciitis and occasional gout flareups means that my feet aren't as flexible as they were 20-some-odd years ago.
 
I can pick stuff up with my toes, and on my right hand I have what's known as a "simian crease." :P
 
I can pick stuff up with my toes, and on my right hand I have what's known as a "simian crease." :P

I have the simian crease on my left hand. It's pretty rare, especially in women, and especially on only one hand. Look at that, we're special! :D
 
Nitpick, most people possess ape-feet. Given that humans are apes.

Common ancestor maybe, probably, but we are not apes. Apes are apes.
 
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