preview

Bipedalism Research Paper

Good Essays

Bipedalism is one of the big six events that happened in the evolution of humans becoming what we are today. Bipedalism means standing, walking on two feet rather than walking on four feet like the other apes our primate family tree. To understand why humans walk using bipedalism anthropologist must look into the past. One of the most significant fossil evidence of bipedalism is a fossil named “Lucy”. Lucy was found in East Africa. She is an adult female that stood at about three and a half feet. Lucy is a significant find because she was the most complete fossil. Forty percent of her body was found, making her the most complete fossil for bipedalism. It is accepted that there is a close relation to the environment for the reason to why there …show more content…

Walking on two limbs allows for easier walking through the forest and the grasslands. The hypothesis still does not explain how early hominins walked bipedal and other organisms walked quadrupedal and bipedal. If energy is saved by walking bipedal then how come are hominins the only ones that walk bipedal full time. Bipedalism allows for faster travel times when it comes to certain obstacles but it does not have an advantage with other obstacles. Being two-footed does help ease the obstacles that are encountered (Parker, & McBrayer, 2016). Locomotor efficiency hypothesis is a valid hypothesis because it allows for testing but it makes since taking into to account where the first bipedal hominins were found and what was most likely the terrain. There was mostly forest and grassland and for long distance one must need to have energy as well as the ability to move around obstacles with ease.
Thermoregulation …show more content…

There is a statement where the authors state they are not in support of thermoregulation being part of the evolution to bipedalism (Ruxton, & Wilkinson, 2011). Some anthropologist attempt to explain how hair lost is part thermoregulation and the reason hominins becoming bipedal. Wheeler believed that thermoregulation causes the lost of body hair. He concluded that haired bipeds where favored in open habitat However, with all of Wheeler’s research the nakedness of the body possibly happened in a forested area and before or around the time organisms started walking on two limbs, not after. The use of thermoregulation as a base of evolutionary change appears to be invalid according to the aouther. Thermoregulation changed with bipedality it did not cause it. (do Amaral,

Get Access