CORDIS Project
Funding breakdown and partner intelligence are Premium
Sign in and upgrade to Premium for EU contribution totals, consortium analytics, OpenAlex research context, and AI summaries. · 0 consortium intelligence fields visible of 1
Start free • Cancel anytime • 14-day refund guarantee
The CRAHL project investigates the evolutionary development of bipedal locomotion in early human ancestors by analyzing trabecular bone structure in fossils. It aims to understand how juvenile hominins transitioned from arboreal to terrestrial movement, providing insights into the growth patterns of human locomotion.
Of all the traits that define humans, bipedal locomotion likely evolved first.
How and why bipedalism evolved in the fossil human (hominin) lineage are fundamental questions in palaeoanthropology.
An underexplored dimension of “how” bipedalism evolved is its growth and development (ontogeny).
Humans locomotion develops much slower than those of other apes.
Modern humans are also fully terrestrial, while the other African apes transition from predominantly arboreal locomotion using their upper li…
STICHTING NATURALIS BIODIVERSITY CENTER
Partner organizations (coordinator is shown above), with normalized type and CORDIS activity type. Guests see up to 4 partners.
Similar projects, consortium collaboration history, frequent partners, and OpenAlex research context.
Guests see up to 5 EuroSciVoc fields.
Guests see up to 5 topics.
Guests see up to 5 keywords.