Why can't you wiggle your toes one at a time?

A biological anthropologist explains why humans can't wiggle their toes in the same way they can wiggle their fingers.

Baby chimpanzee chewing on a twig.
A baby chimp can grab a stick equally well with its fingers and its toes.

One of my favorite activities is going to the zoo where I live in Knoxville when it first opens and the animals are most active. On one recent weekend, I headed to the chimpanzees first.

Their breakfast was still scattered around their enclosure for them to find. Ripley, one of the male chimpanzees, quickly gathered up some fruits and vegetables, sometimes using his feet almost like hands. After he ate, he used his feet to grab the fire hoses hanging around the enclosure and even held pieces of straw and other toys in his toes.

Steven Lautzenheiser
Assistant Professor of Biological Anthropology, University of Tennessee

Lautzenheiser's research focuses on the biomechanics of the foot and ankle of modern humans. Understanding how the human talus responds to force allows him to examine the selective pressures that would have affected the morphology of the foot structure and, hence, the entire locomotor system. To do this he synthesizes anthropological and engineering theories and methods, including motion capture and kinematic/kinetic analysis using Matlab.

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