Terence Capellini (@tdcapellini) 's Twitter Profile
Terence Capellini

@tdcapellini

ID: 1961200957716647936

calendar_today28-08-2025 22:56:21

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Springer Nature (@springernature) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The upper part of the human pelvis, known as the ilium, underwent two major structural innovations during evolution that enabled humans to walk on two legs. The study lays the developmental and genetic groundwork for the human-defining trait of bipedalism: spklr.io/6011BHH8R

nature (@nature) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Analyses of pelvis development in humans and other primates reveal how changes in bone-patterning processes helped humans to gain the ability to walk upright go.nature.com/4lQt9uv

Harvard Magazine (@harvardmagazine) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Terence Capellini Terence Capellini, a professor in the department of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University Harvard Department of Human Evolutionary Biology has spent the past several years analyzing human pelvic evolution to explain why bipedalism may have evolved. #Harvard harvardmagazine.com/research/harva…