Gtronns
Gtronns t1_jdw86h9 wrote
Reply to comment by Lonely-Description85 in Why are nonhuman erect bipedal animals so rare? by violetmammal4694
Yeah, ive heard some theories like that, basically we are hairless water apes.
Ive also heard that we made leaps and bounds intelligence wise once when we started cooking our food with fire. Some theories say that we started eating cooked food after scavenging the remains after a forest fire, and finding cooked meat. Hard to say what actually happened, but i find that one to be a fun one.
Gtronns t1_jdw5plw wrote
Reply to comment by Lonely-Description85 in Why are nonhuman erect bipedal animals so rare? by violetmammal4694
Exactly. There are some great theories out there by evolutionary biologists.
So the idea is that we adapted a long time into trees, then the trees receded, and we adapted to the ground.
Now that we had gripping hands, and feet that could walk us places, we started being able to shape our environment and our tools, which led to greater intelligence.
Combine all of that, leads to us spreading out. Humans that went borth to Europe adapted to the lack of sunlight evolved. The humans that went on to asia evolved differently, to their climate, and they were the ones that were the ones that kept migrating, until they got to the americas (land bridge from russia to alaska that was exposed when ocean water receded into the ice caps - ocean water evaporates, clouds flow over the continents, it snows/rains, that precipitation turns to ice and stays as ice, ie a glacier, thus leading to the exposed land bridge). There they kept migrating south. The evidence for this is found in similarities that asians and native americans share genetically.
TL;DR We evolved in trees, trees stopped growing where we were, we evolved for the ground, ground got dry, we evolved to travel. We traveled far while the oceans were low. Go humans!!
Gtronns t1_jdutbga wrote
Reply to comment by jlpulice in Why are nonhuman erect bipedal animals so rare? by violetmammal4694
Yeah, the idea was that once there were no more (significantly less) trees, we had a lot of walking to do. My point though, is that the trees left us, not us leaving the trees.
Gtronns t1_jdurnmt wrote
Reply to comment by jlpulice in Why are nonhuman erect bipedal animals so rare? by violetmammal4694
Ive heard that as the climate in africa changed, the trees receded from the region, but we stayed put.
Gtronns t1_jdw9nex wrote
Reply to comment by Lonely-Description85 in Why are nonhuman erect bipedal animals so rare? by violetmammal4694
"Dammmmn tuk-tuk, what smells so gooooood?" grunts and points to brunt deer in response