RT Journal Article T1 A partial distal humerus from the Middle Pleistocene depositsat Bodo, Middle Awash, Ethiopia A1 Carretero, José Miguel A1 Haile Selassie, Yohannes A1 Rodríguez García, Laura A1 Arsuaga Ferreras, Juan Luis AB The Bodo partial distal humerus with an approximate age of 0.6 million years is one of thevery few postcranial remains from the African Middle Pleistocene. Despite its fragmentary status,comparisons of the Bodo humerus with other fossil hominid and modern human samples reveal someinsights into African hominids of this time period. The Bodo partial humerus displays distal humeralfeatures very common in the European Middle and Late Pleistocene hominids, such as a relativelywide olecranon fossa and relatively thin lateral and medial pillars adjacent to the fossa. In Africa, thepostcranial fossils from the Middle and Late Pleistocene exhibit a surprising amount of morphologicaldiversity. The presence of ‘typically’ Neandertal traits in some, but not all, Homo ergaster, H. Rhodesiensis,and early H. sapiens, together with the greater similarity of some African specimens than othersto recent humans, highlights the problem of interpreting the anatomical variation that characterizesAfrican fossil humans. An analysis of frequency–based patterning can help us understand this strikingvariation. Populations of Middle Pleistocene African hominids, such as the one represented by theBodo specimen studied here, may have been variable, and their skeletons may have contained a mosaicof modern and non–modern human traits. PB Anthropological Society of Nippon SN 0918-7960 YR 2009 FD 2009 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/44368 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/44368 LA eng DS Docta Complutense RD 17 dic 2025