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Boyer diss 2009 1046..

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Femur<br />

Description.—Both femora of UM 87990 are preserved (Fig. 4.24; Table 4.17A-<br />

C). The left element is in better condition. The right element is missing the apophysis of<br />

the greater trochanter, has a noticeably displaced proximal epiphysis, and has a crushed<br />

distal shaft segment.<br />

The femur is slender and straight with a slightly anteriorly convex bend to its<br />

shaft. The femoral head is globular. Its articular surface has a narrow extension that<br />

covers the posterior aspect of the ridge connecting the head to the greater trochanter. The<br />

fovea capitis femoris is positioned close to the inferior rim of the epiphysis and slightly<br />

posterior of medial. The femoral head sits on a femoral neck that projects at ~145° from<br />

the femoral shaft.<br />

The greater trochanter extends to the proximal level of the femoral head. It is<br />

canted slightly anteriorly. A deep trochanteric fossa is present on its posterior surface.<br />

The distolateral edge of the fossa meets a faint ridge that arcs medially across the<br />

posterior surface of the femur to meet the lesser trochanter; this ridge is the<br />

intertochanteric crest. The lesser trochanter is positioned quite far distally, such that the<br />

femoral shaft becomes noticeably constricted distal to the head and greater trochanter, but<br />

proximal to the lesser and third trochanters. The lesser trochanter projects medially and<br />

somewhat proximally, at an angle paralleling the femoral neck. It is relatively large and<br />

projects medially beyond the femoral head on the left side. The third trochanter is<br />

comparatively small in its lateral projection. It is positioned slightly farther distally than<br />

the lesser trochanter. It sports a laterally facing rugosity for the gluteus superficialis<br />

muscle (George, 1977; Sargis 2002b).<br />

330

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