RT Journal A1 Marzke, Mary W. T1 Upper-Limb Evolution and Development JF The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery JO The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery YR 2009 FD July 1 VO 91 IS Supplement_4 SP 26 OP 30 DO 10.2106/JBJS.I.00102 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.2106/JBJS.I.00102 AB The human forelimb is a mosaic of morphological features that reflect the evolutionary history of locomotor and manipulative behaviors. The phylogenetic approach identifies traits shared with and derived from other species. First, the general sequence of appearance of these features can be traced through a comparative process in which traits shared with other living and fossil species are identified. Some are shared exclusively with the closest relatives of humans, the chimpanzees, indicating their relatively recent appearance, whereas others, for example, the forelimb pattern of the humerus, radius, and ulna, are found among mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and certain fossil fish, indicating that the first appearance of the feature was in a common ancestor approximately 380 million years ago. Second, features unique to humans, termed derived features (indicating that they evolved following the divergence of humans from chimpanzees 6 to 7 million years ago) can be analyzed in order to construct a cladogram, or phylogenetic tree, with nodes representing hypothetical common ancestors of humans and living and fossil nonhuman groups, inferred from the shared elements of the human mosaic pattern (Fig. 1). These groups are increasingly inclusive toward the base of the cladogram; human-derived features evolved after node 6.