Unilateral, below-knee amputees have altered gait mechanics, which can significantly affect mobility. For example, amputees often have asymmetric leg loading as well as higher metabolic cost and an increased risk of falling compared to non-amputees. Belowknee amputees lose the functional use of the ankle muscles, which are critical in nonamputee walking for providing body support, forward propulsion and leg-swing initiation. The ankle muscles also regulate angular momentum in non-amputees, which is important for providing body stability and preventing falls. Thus, compensatory mechanisms in amputee walking are developed to accomplish the functional tasks normally provided by the ankle muscles. In Chapters 2 and 3, three-dimensional forward dynamics simulations of amputee and non-amputee walking were generated to identify compensatory mechanisms and their effects on joint loading and metabolic cost. Results showed that the prosthesis provided body support, but did not provide sufficient body propulsion or leg-swing initiation. As a result, compensations by the residual leg gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, and hamstrings were needed. The simulations also showed the intact leg tibio-femoral joint contact impulse was greater than the residual leg and that the vasti and hamstrings were the primary contributors to the joint impulse on both the intact and residual legs. The amputee simulation had higher metabolic cost than the nonamputee simulation, which was primarily due to prolonged muscle activity from the residual leg gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, hamstrings, vasti and intact leg vasti and ankle muscles. In Chapter 4, whole-body angular momentum in amputees and nonamputees was analyzed. Reduced residual leg propulsion resulted in a smaller range of sagittal plane angular momentum in the second half of the gait cycle. Thus, to conserve angular momentum, reduced braking was needed in the first half of the gait cycle. Decreased residual leg braking appears to be an important mechanism to regulate sagittal plane angular momentum in amputee walking, but was also associated with a greater range of angular momentum that may contribute to reduced stability in amputees. These studies have provided important insight into compensatory mechanisms in below-knee amputee walking and have the potential to guide rehabilitation methods to improve amputee mobility.