Aquatic Ape Hypothesis

Laura

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I've just recently read "Scars of Evolution" by Elaine Morgen and I have to say that it is a compelling read. It's about the "Aquatic Ape Hypothesis". I highly recommend it because it touches on a lot of topics that we discuss on the forum including polyvagal theory and the paleodiet. Here's what Wikipedia has to say about it:

The aquatic ape hypothesis (AAH) is an alternative explanation of some characteristics of human evolution which hypothesizes that the common ancestors of modern humans spent a period of time adapting to life in a partially-aquatic environment. The hypothesis is based on differences between humans and other great apes, and apparent similarities between humans and some aquatic mammals. First proposed in 1942 and expanded in 1960, its greatest proponent has been the writer Elaine Morgan, who has spent more than forty years discussing the AAH.

While it is uncontroversial that both H. neanderthalensis and early H. sapiens were better suited to aquatic environments than other great apes,[1][2] and there have been conjectures suggesting protohumans underwent some adaptations due to interaction with water[3] the sort of radical specialization posited by the AAH has not been accepted within the scientific community as a valid explanation for human divergence from related primates. It has been criticized for possessing a variety of theoretical problems, for lacking evidentiary support, and for there being alternative explanations for many of the observations suggested to support the hypothesis. Morgan has also suggested that her status as an academic outsider has hindered acceptance of the hypothesis.

History

In a 1942 book, the German pathologist Max Westenhöfer published the idea of humans evolving in proximity to water with the statement "The postulation of an aquatic mode of life during an early stage of human evolution is a tenable hypothesis, for which further inquiry may produce additional supporting evidence."[4]

In 1930 marine biologist Alister Hardy hypothesized that humans may have had ancestors more aquatic than previously imagined. Because it was outside his field and he was aware of the controversy it would cause, Hardy delayed reporting his hypothesis. After he had become a respected academic, Hardy finally voiced his thoughts in a speech to the British Sub-Aqua Club in Brighton on 5 March 1960, not expecting any attention, but it was reported in a national newspaper. This generated immediate controversy in the field of paleoanthropology. Consequently Hardy published the hypothesis in an article in New Scientist on 17 March 1960. He defined his idea:

My thesis is that a branch of this primitive ape-stock was forced by competition from life in the trees to feed on the sea-shores and to hunt for food, shell fish, sea-urchins etc., in the shallow waters off the coast. I suppose that they were forced into the water just as we have seen happen in so many other groups of terrestrial animals. I am imagining this happening in the warmer parts of the world, in the tropical seas where Man could stand being in the water for relatively long periods, that is, several hours at a stretch.[5]

The idea received some interest after the article was published,[6] but was generally ignored by the scientific community thereafter. In 1967, the hypothesis was briefly mentioned in The Naked Ape, a book by Desmond Morris in which can be found the first use of the term "aquatic ape".[7] Writer Elaine Morgan read about the idea in Morris' book and was struck by its potential explanatory power, becoming its main promoter and publishing six books over the next 40 years.[8] The context of initial presentations of the idea (a popular work and a political text) prevented the AAH from garnering serious interest or an exploration of its scientific merit.[9]

Despite maintaining some popular and scientific interest over several decades, the aquatic ape hypothesis has not been accepted by a large majority of researchers within the field of paleoanthropology.[10] A small but active number of promoters working outside of mainstream paleoanthropology, non-anthropologists and the occasional professional still cite and bring attention to the AAH but it has never been completely discredited to its adherents nor fully explored by researchers.[9]
The hypothesis

The AAH suggests that many of the features that distinguish humans from their nearest evolutionary relatives can be explained through a period of aquatic adaptation in which protohumans spent time wading, swimming and feeding on the shores of fresh, saline or brackish waters (though there has been disagreement and modification of the theory regarding the salinity of the purported watery environment[11][12][13]) and suggests comparisons with other aquatic or semiaquatic species with similar characteristics. Some observations include:

* Bipedalism out of water causes considerable problems for the back, knees and organs, while water would support the joints and torso and permit breathing[14][15]
* Humans are relatively hairless compared to great apes, similar to the hairlessness of land-dwelling rhinoceros and elephant which both have aquatic ancestors;[16] what body hair humans do have also follows water flow-lines[17]
* Increased subcutaneous fat for insulation, especially in human infants[5]
* A descended larynx[17][18]
* A hooded nose, muscular nostril aperture control and the philtrum preventing water from entering the nostrils[17]
* Extensive coverage of the skin by sebaceous glands[19]
* The requirement of the human brain for certain nutrients including iodine[20] and some essential fatty acids[21] which are most easily found and absorbed in seafood[22]
* Voluntary breath control which allows diving and swimming,[14][23] and a more streamlined shape compared to other apes[17]
* The mammalian diving reflex which occurs when the head is immersed in cold water[24]
* Vestigial webbing between the fingers[25]
* The waxy coating found on newborns[17]
* Certain morphological adaptations within the kidney[26]

The timelines hypothesized for a period of adjusting to aquatic living vary from the Miocene about 6 million years ago,[5] to nearly 2 million years ago in the late Pliocene or early Pleistocene.[27][28] It is also theorized that the semi-aquatic phase occurred when protohumans migrated along the southern Asian coastline during a previous ice age when sea levels were considerably lower; this is also proffered as a reason why human fossils are not found in aquatic habitats, as those regions were inundated when the polar ice caps melted.[29]

Review of the individual claims used as evidence for the AAH generally does not support the hypothesis overall, and most of these traits have an explanation within conventional theories of human evolution.[9] Other authors have suggested that wading and other interactions with watery environments may have provided a less extreme but still present role in human evolution.[3]

I'm not including the criticisms because they are basically of the usual corrupted science kind: demanding more proof of something they don't "believe" in than they demand of what they DO believe in!
 
My thesis is that a branch of this primitive ape-stock was forced by competition from life in the trees to feed on the sea-shores and to hunt for food, shell fish, sea-urchins etc., in the shallow waters off the coast. I suppose that they were forced into the water just as we have seen happen in so many other groups of terrestrial animals. I am imagining this happening in the warmer parts of the world, in the tropical seas where Man could stand being in the water for relatively long periods, that is, several hours at a stretch.[5]

I watched Super Comet: After The Impact last night, which posits that survivors of cataclysmic events naturally be drawn to coastlines because oceans would retain relatively milder temperatures than the extreme cold (from the resulting ice age) in the interiors of continents. So it could well be that profound and sudden environmental changes forced such an adaptation.
 
Perhaps the Von Economo cells in the brain are also related to the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis:

Session 30 January 2010

(Psyche) I have a question. When we were discussing with I**** some type of cells that are located mainly in the frontal lobe of the brain, it seems that nobody knows what they are for. They are called spindle cells or "von Economo neurons" if I remember the name correctly. What are their function?

A: Consciousness orientation.

Q: (Ailén) Hmm.

(Andromeda) So I guess having a lot of those would be good?

(Burma Jones) So, is that like a registration bin for consciousness to figure out how to keep itself...

A: Energy directors.

Q: (Joe) Can you get more of them?

A: You may.

Q: (Joe) I wonder if those cells have anything to do with the third eye, like when you do the breathing and you look up...

A: Close, more like a "homing device".

Q: (Joe) A homing device for aliens?

A: Wave reader. {Cs refer to souled humans as “Wave Reading Consciousness Units.}

Q: (Ailén) I**** was saying that they're huge cells. Right? (Psyche) Yeah. She was wondering if they could be related to psychopathy, like the lack of those cells...

A: Oh yes.


Q: (Andromeda) Hmm...

(Ailén) She said there were some studies about schizophrenics not having so many of them also.

(Psyche) They have been studied in whales too.

More info on spindle cells or Von Economo cells here:

http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,15927.msg133918.html#msg133918

Spindle neurons, also called von Economo neurons (VENs), are a specific class of neurons that participate in signal transmission in the nervous system, and are characterized by a large spindle-shaped soma, gradually tapering into a single apical axon in one direction, with only a single dendrite facing opposite. Whereas other types of neurons tend to have many dendrites, the polar shaped morphology of spindle neurons is unique. They are found in two very restricted regions in the brains of hominids - the family of species comprising humans and other great apes. Spindle cells are also found in the brains of the humpback whales, fin whales, killer whales and sperm whales [1][2], bottlenose dolphin, Risso’s dolphin, beluga whales[3] and in the brains of African and Asian elephants.[4] The name von Economo neuron comes from their discoverer, Constantin von Economo (1876-1931).
 
SethianSeth said:
That book had been on my list after seeing her wonderful lecture on Ted.com. It is worth a watch! Not to mention, she is an adorably charming lady :)

http://www.ted.com/talks/elaine_morgan_says_we_evolved_from_aquatic_apes.html

Glad to hear the book is good!

Me too, glad you started this thread Laura. I found this i think it is a lecture/essay by Elaine Morgan. Its from this site http://users.ugent.be/~mvaneech/Symposium.html. Just click on her name. Now lets start quoting.
The crucial question about human evolution is why humans differ so strikingly from the African apes despite their close genetic relationship. Most Darwinists would agree that such differences are usually attributable to differing environmental pressures; and hence that our ancestors at some stage probably occupied a significantly different habitat from the ancestor of the gorilla and the chimpanzee.

[...]

Alister Hardy's suggestion in 1960 that it might have been a much wetter one was intuitively and almost unanimously rejected. Primates were said to have an innate fear of water which many humans share, and the fossils of early hominids were found far inland, in arid sites on the African plains. Above all . Hardy's ideas were felt to be unnecessary. There was a tacit assumption that the main ape/human differences had been adequately accounted for in terms of a move by some populations of the last common ancestor from the forest to the savanna, and that any details still unexplained were well on the way to being solved.

That was a misconception. Consensus on the reasons for the emergence of the most salient distinguishing features of Homo - such as bipedalism, loss of body hair, subcutaneous fat, and the power of speech - is no nearer today than it was in Darwin's lifetime.

Bipedalism

Humans are so accustomed to erect locomotion that it takes a specialist to appreciate what a bizarre and costly adaptation it was. Owen Lovejoy commented: " "For any quadruped to get upon its hind legs in order to run is an insane thing to do. It's plain ridiculous." As a gait it is far more unstable than quadrupedalism; it takes very much longer to learn, greatly extending the period when the female is burdened with the task of carrying the infant; it is a deplorably ineffective defence posture, exposing the most vulnerable organs of the body to the risk of damage or evisceration; unlike in quadrupeds damage to one leg or foot can be crippling rather than a temporary inconvenience.

[...]

In any cost/benefit analysis the advantages of erect locomotion must have been very great to outweigh these drawbacks. The aquatic model suggests that in a flooded habitat, bipedalism may have been resorted to under duress, the significant reward being the ability to breathe air. In terms of the savanna scenario the suggested benefits have been many and varied and no explanation has carried conviction for long. At first bipedalism was depicted as an improved method of covering long distances . But running on two legs is slower than on four, and consumes no less energy. It is true that at walking speeds a modern human consumes less energy than a chimpanzee, but it must have been millions of years before this benefit accrued. In one experiment, a human volunteer constrained by an orthopsis to adopt the bent-knee-bent -hip gait practised by the early hominids used twice as much energy as we do today.

[...]

Sentinel behaviour was once a favourite hypothesis since many species stand erect to scan the horizon; however in non-human species this never develops from postural to locomotor bipedalism. A weapon-bearing scenario lost ground when bipedalism was found to have preceded any indication of the use of weapons. A food-carrying theory based on pair-bonding in the interests of the slow-developing young was weakened by the discovery that the slow-down of development post-dated the advent of bipedalism. A thermoregulatory hypothesis suggesting that erect posture lessened the sun's mid-day heat load on a savanna primate became less credible once it was accepted that bipedalism preceded the emergence of savanna conditions. Picking fruit from low bushes has been observed to induce chimpanzees to stand up on two legs - but not to walk around on them. A study was published in 1994 based on 700 hours of observation of wild chimpanzees in a mosaic habitat. The open savanna was the place in which they were least likely to display bipedal behaviour, whether postural or locomotor. The net result of all the speculations is best reflected in a frank statement by two of the early theorists, Sherwood Washburn and Roger Lewin: "We have to admit being baffled about the origin of upright walking. Probably our thinking is being constrained by preconceived notions."

[...]

On the other hand, in recent years gorillas, chimpanzees, Japanese macaques and proboscis and other monkeys have been filmed or photographed exhibiting wading behaviour in the wild, either crossing streams, entering the sea, or wading into pools in search of succulent food items. There is some limited evidence that species most frequently obliged to wade through water, such as proboscis monkeys and bonobos in swamp forest areas, are likelier to stand erect and occasionally walk bipedally on land. It has thus transpired that choosing, or being obliged, to walk through water, is the only circumstance known to conduce to sustained erect bipedal locomotion in wild primates. If it had earlier been possible to make the same claim on respect of walking on the plain, it would have appeared to constitute a powerful piece of circumstantial evidence for the savanna scenario.

Loss of body hair

The original assumption concerning human nakedness, that the hominids shed their body hair to avoid overheating, offered no valid reason why they would have been more at risk from overheating than other species sharing the same habitat. It ignored the fact that depilating an animal on the savanna raises its core temperature, rather than lowering it The argument that nakedness must have been a necessary concomitant of sweat-cooling is invalidated by the example of the thick-coated but efficiently sweat-cooling patas monkey. The progressive shortening of body hairs until they were functionally useless was not an extrapolation of any existing primate trend. Russell Newman convincingly argued that hairlessness must have preceded the move to the savanna; but the feature is no more frequently encountered, and no more easily explained , in a forest habitat than on the open plains. Human skin also differs from that of primates in respect of its greater thickness and elasticity, a radical transformation of the skin glands, and the way it is connected to a layer of fibrous tissue and a fat layer, described by John Napier as "one of humankind’s greatest unsung hallmarks" and found elsewhere only in aquatic species. William Montagna after years of exhaustive research into all aspects of primate skin, reported in 1972 that the problem of human nakedness continued to defy solution.

[...]

It has been shown that in water, in mammals large enough to accommodate a fat layer of the requisite thickness, a naked fat-lined skin provides better insulation than a coat of fur.

Speech

The naïve teleological explanation of why we can speak and apes cannot is that our ancestors must have had a greater need to communicate, perhaps in order to pass on tool-making skills, or to gain insight into the motivation of conspecifics in a society putatively more complex than a chimpanzee’s. .These examples do not explain why it was the vocal channel that was selected for enhancement, rather than the body-language mode in which the primate order was already pre-eminent. In demonstrating how to make a flint arrow-head, words are both inadequate and superfluous, and in divining the mental states of others, we are still apt to rely at least as much on our eyes as on their words. ("I could tell by his face that he was lying.")

While speech is unique to humans, the physical modifications that made it possible are not. Humans but not apes can consciously exert control over the volume of air they inhale, how long they hold it, and how quickly they exhale it. The only other mammals known to be capable of this are diving mammals. It was an essential precondition of speech and the lack of it in apes is an entirely sufficient explanation of why they cannot be taught to speak.

[...]

Fat.

Homo has been described as an obese species; even the slimmest human has the potential for obesity since humans inherit ten times as many adipocytes as would be expected in a mammal of our size. The percentage of fat in a human neonate is greater than that of any other newborn land mammal . It is more than in the harp seal or the sealion, and about six times as much as in a baboon. After birth the baby - despite the high energy requirements of its growing brain – continues to devote roughly 70% of its growth potential to increasing this fat deposit, reaching peak adiposity of around 25% of its body mass by the age of nine months. These facts would not be predicted. either as part of the inheritance from early arboreal ancestors nor as adaptations to a life on the plains of Africa.

One suggested explanation stressed the need of storing energy against possible food shortages, as in hibernating mammals. But the fat in humans is not seasonal, and it is hard to see why natural selection in the hominids would have given priority to food storage in a savanna habitat where speed seems to have been the prime requirement of most other animals whether predators or prey. The other favourite hypothesis is thermoregulation, stressing the cold of the African nights as other thermoregulatory theories stress the heat of the African days.

The attribute of fat to which least attention has been paid is that it provides buoyancy. The amount of fat in diving mammals is liable to vary according to whether they are surface feeders, or deep divers for whom too much buoyancy would be an embarrassment. It is worth noting that a human baby – apart from adapting happily to the water if introduced to it early enough – will float, whereas a chimpanzee or gorilla infant would sink.

The specific place is here http://users.ugent.be/~mvaneech/Morgan.html.
 
I am curious to know why we spend time discussing "evolution"
of the physical human. It is my understanding from reading the
cass. material that the human body was constructed, i.e. bio-engineered,
using parts from all species available on the planet at that time.
This can be seen in the developement of the foetus.
Furthermore most humans were imported from elsewhere,
Please correct me if I am misunderstanding.
 
Leo40 said:
I am curious to know why we spend time discussing "evolution"
of the physical human. It is my understanding from reading the
cass. material that the human body was constructed, i.e. bio-engineered,
using parts from all species available on the planet at that time.
This can be seen in the developement of the foetus.
Furthermore most humans were imported from elsewhere,
Please correct me if I am misunderstanding.

How do we know that a major part/element of this "construction" process was not evolutionary in nature? After all, we are talking about hyperdimensional interactions where a tweak is made here and there, and the machine is set to run ...
 
This reminds me of the following quote:

Q: (L) I have tried to imagine a planet full of people of pure
Aryan types, or purified Celtics, and it is difficult to
imagine what such a culture would be like. Is there
anything that we can look at, literary or otherwise, that
would give me a concept of what this culture or society
could have been like?

A: Search Japan and the Bahamas.

Q: (L) What?! What do Japan and the Bahamas have in common?

A: See for yourself. Remember, learning is fun and
energizes. Spoonfeeding sessions do little for you.

Could the connection between Japan and the Bahamas be as simple as both of them being insular areas surrounded by water? Books like Where Troy Once Stood and Cataclysm of The Gods by Hugh Fox indicate that Europeans had a real affinity for the sea -- maybe that's a cultural holdover that goes back longer than people have guessed. If Kantek was a really watery planet, maybe that's why chunks of ice and fish occasionally fall out of the sky (like Charles Fort records). And if one part of human evolution happened there, maybe it provided a very marine environment where these kinds of adaptations could have occurred?
 
Laura said:
Leo40 said:
I am curious to know why we spend time discussing "evolution"
of the physical human. It is my understanding from reading the
cass. material that the human body was constructed, i.e. bio-engineered,
using parts from all species available on the planet at that time.
This can be seen in the developement of the foetus.
Furthermore most humans were imported from elsewhere,
Please correct me if I am misunderstanding.

How do we know that a major part/element of this "construction" process was not evolutionary in nature? After all, we are talking about hyperdimensional interactions where a tweak is made here and there, and the machine is set to run ...
I may be off track here but are we not in a sense 'evolving' by implementing a paleo diet. The agricultural way of life was taught over many centuries and in a way people devolved, I think, in mental and physical health. So in reverting back to the paleo foods our body chemistry, DNA, etc. is in a way evolving too.Through clearer thinking and healthier more immune bodies who know what we may become in future.Just my few brief thoughts.
 
Laura said:
Leo40 said:
I am curious to know why we spend time discussing "evolution"
of the physical human. It is my understanding from reading the
cass. material that the human body was constructed, i.e. bio-engineered,
using parts from all species available on the planet at that time.
This can be seen in the developement of the foetus.
Furthermore most humans were imported from elsewhere,
Please correct me if I am misunderstanding.

How do we know that a major part/element of this "construction" process was not evolutionary in nature? After all, we are talking about hyperdimensional interactions where a tweak is made here and there, and the machine is set to run ...

It is most likely a combination of both: natural evolution and the occasional
"tweak". Unfortunately it is very difficult to find evidence of diversion or
interference with natural evolution due to the time scale (ca. 300 000 years)
and all the intervening catastrophes.
 
Cool to see this here...my biology teacher has mentioned this in class several times and he says that he thinks it's quite plausible- I agree! It WOULD explain quite a few differences that we see in humans that we don't see elsewhere (listed in the article above, thanks Laura).

Of course, it then begs the question- why did the ancestors of humans/proto-humans/etc have to go back in the water to begin with? Shelter from a hot/smoky/nasty environment caused by comet fires? Also, if so, where did these early humans take a dip, relatively speaking? Sounds as though shallow tropical waters after a comet crash could be a possibility (warmth aided by subcutaneous fat storage)
 
D Rusak said:
Of course, it then begs the question- why did the ancestors of humans/proto-humans/etc have to go back in the water to begin with? Shelter from a hot/smoky/nasty environment caused by comet fires? Also, if so, where did these early humans take a dip, relatively speaking? Sounds as though shallow tropical waters after a comet crash could be a possibility (warmth aided by subcutaneous fat storage)

Any number of possibilities - like an environment where there were not so many mountains, no ice-caps, therefore more water, so that vast areas of Earth were quite simply under water or swamps.
 
Laura said:
D Rusak said:
Of course, it then begs the question- why did the ancestors of humans/proto-humans/etc have to go back in the water to begin with? Shelter from a hot/smoky/nasty environment caused by comet fires? Also, if so, where did these early humans take a dip, relatively speaking? Sounds as though shallow tropical waters after a comet crash could be a possibility (warmth aided by subcutaneous fat storage)

Any number of possibilities - like an environment where there were not so many mountains, no ice-caps, therefore no water, so that vast areas of Earth were quite simply under water or swamps.

Did you mean "therefore more water"?
 
Ask_a_debtor said:
Laura said:
D Rusak said:
Of course, it then begs the question- why did the ancestors of humans/proto-humans/etc have to go back in the water to begin with? Shelter from a hot/smoky/nasty environment caused by comet fires? Also, if so, where did these early humans take a dip, relatively speaking? Sounds as though shallow tropical waters after a comet crash could be a possibility (warmth aided by subcutaneous fat storage)

Any number of possibilities - like an environment where there were not so many mountains, no ice-caps, therefore no water, so that vast areas of Earth were quite simply under water or swamps.

Did you mean "therefore more water"?

Yes, fixed. I was thinking faster than I could write and meant "therefore no great variations in the surface of the globe so that the water was more widely distributed." Reading "Cataclysm" by Allan and Delair sort of lays out a possible scenario for this, by the way.
 
While doing some research on Alister Hardy, because i found the titles of his book interesting, i found this:
WAS MAN MORE AQUATIC IN THE PAST?​
by Professor Sir Alister Hardy, FRS​

The New Scientist, 17 March 1960, ON 5 MARCH I WAS ASKED to address a conference of the British SubAqua Club at Brighton, and chose as my theme "Aquatic Man: Past, Present and Future". I dealt little with the present, for Man's recent achievements in the underwater world were so well illustrated by other speakers, and by films. I ventured to suggest a new hypothesis of Man's origin from more aquatic ape-like ancestors and then went on to discuss possible developments of the future. I did not expect the wide publicity that was given to my views in the daily press, and since such accounts could only be much abbreviated, and in some cases might be misleading, I gladly accepted the invitation of The NewScientist to give a fuller statement of my ideas. I have been toying with this concept of Man's evolution for many years, but until this moment, which suddenly appeared to be an appropriate one, I had hesitated because it had seemed perhaps too fantastic; yet the more I reflected upon it, the more I came to believe it to be possible, or even likely. In this article I shall deal with this hypothesis; next week I shall treat of the future. Man, of course, is a mammal, and all the mammals have been derived, as indeed have also the birds, but by a different line of evolution, from reptile ancestors that flourished more than a hundred million years ago, when the world was populated by saurians of so many different kinds, which have long since become extinct. These reptile ancestors in turn were derived from newt-like animals -amphibian creatures - which had only partially conquered the land, and had to return to water to breed as do most of our salamanders and frogs of today. It is equally certain that these earlier amphibians were evolved from fish which, like those primitive lung-fish that still survive in certain tropical swamps today, had developed lungs with which to breathe. Some of these air-breathing fish, were able to climb from the water on to the land.

This history of the emancipation of animal life from the sea is very well known. I repeat it only because it forms the background to another story, one that is not quite so familiar to those who are not trained as zoologists. At the same time as this conquest of the land was extending with continually improving adaptations to the new terrestrial life, we see (in the fossil record) a different act repeating itself again and again, first with the amphibians, next with the reptiles, and then with the mammals and indeed the birds as well. Excessive multiplication, over-population, shortage of food, resulted in some members of each group [Footnote: The amphibians went back only into freshwater (for certain physiological reasons) not into the sea.] being forced back into the water to make a living, because there was not enough food for them on the land. Among the reptiles I need only remind you of the remarkable fish-like ichthyosaurs, of the plesiosaurs, of many marine crocodile-like animals, and of turtles, not to mention water-snakes. Then, among the mammals of today we see the great group of whales, dolphins and porpoises, with the vestigial remains of their hind legs buried deep in their bodies, beautifully adapted to marine life; or again the dugongs and manatees belonging to an entirely different group. The seals are well on their way to an almost completely aquatic life, and many other groups of mammals have aquatic representatives which have been forced into the water in search of food: the polar bears, the otters (both freshwater and marine), various aquatic rodents, like water voles and the coypu, or insectivores like the water shrew: and, of course, we must not forget the primitive duckbilled platypus. There are, indeed, few groups that have not, during one time or another in the course of evolution had their aquatic representatives: among the birds, the penguins are supreme examples. The suggestion I am about to make may at first seem far-fetched, yet I think it may best explain the striking physical differences that separate Man's immediate ancestors (the Hominidae) from the more ape-like forms (Pongidae) which have each diverged from a common stock of more primitive apelike creatures which had clearly developed for a time as tree-living forms.

My thesis is that a branch of this primitive ape-stock was forced by competition from life in the trees to feed on the sea-shores, and to hunt for food, shell fish, sea-urchins, etc., in the shallow waters off the coast. I suppose that they were forced into the water just as we have seen happen in so many other groups of terrestrial animals. I am imagining this happening in the warmer parts of the world, in the tropical seas, where Man could stand being in the water for relatively long periods, that is, several hours at a stretch. I imagine him wading, at first perhaps still crouching, almost on all fours, groping about in the water, digging for shell fish, but becoming gradually more adept at swimming. Then, in time, I see him becoming more and more of an aquatic animal going farther out from the shore; I see him diving for shell fish, prising out worms, burrowing crabs and bivalves from the sands at the bottom of shallow seas, and breaking open sea-urchins, and then, with increasing skill, capturing fish with his hands. Let us now consider a number of points which such a conception might explain. First and foremost, perhaps, is the exceptional ability of Man to swim, to swim like a frog, and his great endurance at it. The fact that some men can swim the English Channel (albeit with training), indeed that they race across it, indicates to my mind that there must have been a long period of natural selection, improving Man's qualities for such feats. Many animals can swim at the surface, but few, terrestrial mammals can rival Man in swimming below the surface and gracefully turning this way and that in search of what he may be looking for. The extent to which sponge and pearl divers can hold their breath under water is perhaps another outcome of such past adaptation. It may be objected that children have to be taught to swim; but the same is true of young otters, and I should regard them as more aquatic than Man has been. Further, I have been told that babies put into water before they have learnt to walk will, in fact, go through the motions of swimming at once, but not after they have walked. Does the idea perhaps explain the satisfaction that so many people feel in going to the seaside, in bathing, and in indulging in various forms of aquatic sport? Does not the vogue of the aqua-lung indicate a latent urge in Man to swim below the surface? Whilst not invariably so, the loss of hair is a characteristic of a number of aquatic mammals; for example, the whales, the Sirenia (that is, the dugongs and manatees) and the hippopotamus. Aquatic mammals, which come out of the water in cold and temperate climates have retained their fur for warmth on land, as have the seals, otters, beavers, etc. Man has lost his hair all except on the head, that part of him sticking out of the water as he swims: such hair is possibly retained as a guard against the rays of the tropical sun, and its loss from the face of the female is, of course, the result of sexual selection. Actually the apparent hairlessness of Man is not always due to an absence of hair: in the white races it is more apparent than real in that the hairs are there, but are small and exceedingly reduced in thickness: in some of the black races, however, the hairs have actually gone, but in either case the effect is the same: that of reducing the resistance of the body in swimming. Hair, under water, naturally loses its original function of keeping the body warm by acting as a poor heat conductor; that quality, of course, depends upon the air held stationary in the spaces between the hairs - the principle adopted in Aertex underwear. Actually the loss or reduction of hair in Man is an adaptation by the retention into adult life of an early embryonic condition; the unborn chimpanzee has hair on its head like Man, but little on its body. Whilst discussing hair it is interesting to point out that what are called the "hair tracts" – the directions in which the hairs lie on different parts of the body - are different in Man from those in the apes; particularly to be noted are the hairs on the back, which are all pointing in lines to meet diagonally towards the mid-line, exactly as the streams of water would pass round the body and meet, when it is swimming forward like a frog. Such an arrangement of hair, offering less resistance, may have been a first step in aquatic adaptation before its loss. The graceful shape of Man - or woman! - is most striking when compared with the clumsy form of the ape. All the curves of the human body have the beauty of a well-designed boat. Man is indeed streamlined. These sweeping curves of the body are helped by the development of fat below the skin and, indeed, the presence of this subcutaneous fat is again a characteristic that distinguishes Man from the other primates. It was a note of this fact in the late Professor Wood Jones's book “Man's Place among the Mammals” (p. 309) that set me thinking of the possibility of Man having a more aquatic past when I read it more than thirty years ago.

I quote the paragraph as follows:
"The peculiar relation of the skin to the underlying superficial fascia is a very real distinction, familiar enough to everyone who has repeatedly skinned both human subjects, and any other members of the Primates. The bed of subcutaneous fat adherent to the skin, so conspicuous in Man, is possibly related to his apparent hair reduction; though it is difficult to see why, if no other factor is invoked, there should be such a basal difference between Man and the Chimpanzee."
I read this in 1929 when I had recently returned from an Antarctic expedition where the layers of blubber of whales, seals and penguins were such a feature of these examples of aquatic life; such layers of fat are found in other water animals as well; and at once I thought perhaps Man had been aquatic too. In warm-blooded water animals such layers of fat act as insulating layers to prevent heat loss; in fact, in function they replace the hair. Man, having lost his hair, must, before he acquired the use of clothing, have been subjected to great contrasts of temperature out of water; in this connection it is interesting to note the experiments carried out at Oxford by Dr. J. S. Weiner, who showed what an exceptional range of temperature change in air Man can stand, compared with other mammals. Man's great number of sweat glands enable him to stand a tropical climate and still retain a large layer of fat necessary for aquatic life. This idea of an aquatic past might also help to solve another puzzle which Professor Wood Jones stressed so forcibly, that of understanding how Man obtained his erect posture, and also kept his hands in the primitive, unspecialized, vertebrate condition; for long periods, the hands could not have been used in support of the body as they are in the modern apes, which have never mastered the complete upright position. The chimpanzee slouches forward with his body partly supported by his long arms and with his hands bent up, to take the weight on the knuckles. Man must have left the trees much earlier; in all the modern apes the length of the arm is much longer than that of the leg. In Man it is the reverse. The puzzle is: how in fact did Man come to have the perfect erect posture that he has - enabling him to run with such ease and balance? Some have supposed that he could actually have achieved it by such running, or perhaps by leaping, but this does not seem likely. Let me again quote from Wood Jones, this time from his book “The Hallmarks of Mankind ,” 1948, p. 78:
"Almost equal certainty may be attached to the rejection of the possibility that he ever served an apprenticeship as a specialized leaper or a specialized runner in open spaces. But it is by no means so easy to reject the supposition that he commenced his career of bipedal orthograde progression as what might be termed a toddler, somewhat after the fashion followed in some degree by the bears."
It seems indeed possible that his mastery of the erect posture arose by such toddling, but performed in the water, like children at the seaside. Wading about, at first paddling and toddling along the shores in the shallows, hunting for shellfish, Man gradually went farther and farther into deeper water; swimming for a time, but having at intervals to rest - resting with his feet on the bottom and his head out of the surface: in fact, standing erect with the water supporting his weight. He would have to raise his head out of the water to feed; with his hands full of spoil, he could do so better standing, than floating. It seems to me likely that Man learnt to stand erect first in the water, and then, as his balance improved, he found he became better equipped for standing up on the shore when he came out, and indeed also for running. He would naturally have to return to the beach to sleep and to get water to drink; actually I imagine him to have spent at least half his time on the land.

Tied up with his method of assuming the erect position, is the problem of the human hand. Let me quote again from Wood Jones (ibid., p. 80):
"In the first place, it seems to be perfectly clear that the human orthograde habit must have been established so early in the mammalian story that a hand of primitive vertebrate simplicity was preserved, with all its initial potentialities, by reason of its being emancipated from any office of mere bodily support. Perhaps the extreme structural primitiveness of the human hand is a thing that can only be appreciated fully by the comparative anatomist, but some reflection on the subject will convince anyone that its very perfections, which at first sight might appear to be specializations, are all the outcome of its being a hand unaltered for any of the diverse uses to which the many uses of most of the 'lower' mammals is put. Man's primitive hand must have been set free to perform the functions that it now subserves at a period very early indeed in the mammalian story."

Man's hand has all the characters of a sensitive, exploring device, continually feeling with its tentacle-like fingers
over the sea-bed: using them to clutch hold of crabs and other crustaceans, to prise out bivalves from the sand, and to break them open, to turn over stones to find the worms, and other creatures sheltering underneath. There are fish which have finger-like processes on their fins, such as the gurnards; they are just such sensitive feeling organs, hunting for food, and they too, have been known to turn over stones with them while looking for it. It seems likely that Man learnt his tool-making on the shore.

One of the few non-human mammals to use a tool is the Californian sea-otter, which dives to the bottom, brings up a large sea-urchin in one hand, and a stone in the other, and then, whilst it floats on its back at the surface, breaks the sea-urchin against its chest with the stone, and swallows the rich contents. Man no doubt first saw the possibilities of using stones, lying ready at hand on the beach, to crack open the enshelled "packages" of food, which were otherwise tantalizingly out of his reach; so in far-off days he smashed the shells of the sea urchins, and crushed lobsters' claws to get out the delicacies that we so much enjoy today. From the use of such natural stones, it was but a step to split flints into more efficient tools, and then into instruments for the chase. Having done this, and learnt how to strike together flints to make fires, perhaps with dried seaweed, on the sea-shore, Man, now erect and a fast runner, was equipped for the conquest of the continents, the vast open spaces with their herds of grazing game. Whilst he became a great hunter, we know from the mid-dens of mesolithic Man that shell fish for long remained a favourite food. In such a brief treatment I cannot deal with all the aspects of the subject: I shall later do so at greater length, and in more detail in a full-scale study of the problem. I will just here mention one more point. The students of the fossil record have for so long been perturbed by the apparent sudden appearance of Man. Where are the fossil remains that linked the Hominidae with their more ape-like ancestors? The recent finds in South Africa of Australopithecus seem to carry us a good step nearer to our common origin with the ape stock, but before then there is a gap. Is it possible that the gap is due to the period when Man struggled and died in the sea? Perhaps his remains became the food of powerful sea creatures which crushed his bones out of recognition, or could his bones have been dissolved, eroded away in the tropical seas? Perhaps, in time, some expedition to investigate tropical Pliocene (coastal) deposits may yet reveal these missing links.

It is interesting to note that the Miocene fossil Proconsul , which may perhaps represent approximately the kind of ape giving rise to the human stock, has an arm and hand of a very unspecialized form: much more human than that of the modern ape. It is in the gap of some ten million years, or more, between Proconsul and Australopithecus, that I suppose Man to have been cradled in the sea. My thesis is, of course, only a speculation - an hypothesis to be discussed and tested against further lines of evidence. Such ideas are useful only if they stimulate fresh inquiries which may bring us nearer the truth.
Source: http://www.scribd.com/doc/55683292/Was-Man-More-Aquatic-in-the-Past-Alister-Hardy

"I" just copied and pasted the text from scribd into Microsoft Word, and did some editing, because there were a lot of spelling mistakes, and formating issues.
 
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