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A study by University of Utah biologist Dennis Bramble and
Harvard University anthropologist Daniel Lieberman made
the cover of the Nov. 18 issue of the British science journal
Nature. The study assembles evidence that humans evolved
and human anatomy looks the way it does because our ancestors
were more likely to survive if they could run. (Editors:
Please note nude content of photo.)
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download high-resolution click here:
Credit: Courtesy of Nature, cover by Justin Libby, Mathieu
Baissac and Daniel Lieberman, after photographer Eadweard
Muybridge's 19th century studies of human motion. |

Drawings of our ape-like ancestor, Australopithecus afarensis,
and an early human species, Homo erectus, shows some of the
differences that gave humans the ability to run long distances.
To
download high-resolution click here:
Credit: Laszlo Meszoly, Harvard University. |
Nov. 17, 2004 – Humans evolved from ape-like
ancestors because they needed to run long distances – perhaps
to hunt animals or scavenge carcasses on Africa’s vast savannah
– and the ability to run shaped our anatomy, making us look
like we do today.
That is the conclusion of a study published in the Nov. 18 issue
of the journal Nature by University of Utah biologist
Dennis Bramble and Harvard University anthropologist Daniel Lieberman.
The study is featured on Nature’s cover.
Bramble and Lieberman argue that our genus, Homo, evolved
from more ape-like human ancestors, Australopithecus,
2 million or more years ago because natural selection favored
the survival of australopithecines that could run and, over time,
favored the perpetuation of human anatomical features that made
long-distance running possible.
“We are very confident that strong selection for running
– which came at the expense of the historical ability to
live in trees – was instrumental in the origin of the modern
human body form,” says Bramble, a professor of biology.
“Running has substantially shaped human evolution. Running
made us human – at least in an anatomical sense. We think
running is one of the most transforming events in human history.
We are arguing the emergence of humans is tied to the evolution
of running.”
That conclusion is contrary to the conventional theory that running
simply was a byproduct of the human ability to walk. Bipedalism
– the ability to walk upright on two legs – evolved
in the ape-like Australopithecus at least 4.5 million
years ago while they also retained the ability to travel through
the trees. Yet Homo with its “radically transformed
body” did not evolve for another 3 million or more years
– Homo habilis, Homo erectus and, finally,
our species, Homo sapiens – so the ability to walk
cannot explain anatomy of the modern human body, Bramble says.
“There were 2.5 million to 3 million years of bipedal walking
[by australopithecines] without ever looking like a human, so
is walking going to be what suddenly transforms the hominid body?”
he asks. “We’re saying, no, walking won’t do
that, but running will.”
Walking cannot explain most of the changes in body form that distinguish
Homo from Australopithecus, which – when
compared with Homo – had short legs, long forearms,
high permanently “shrugged” shoulders, ankles that
were not visibly apparent and more muscles connecting the shoulders
to the head and neck, Bramble says. If natural selection had not
favored running, “we would still look a lot like apes,”
he adds.
I Run, Therefore I Am
Bramble and Lieberman examined 26 traits of the human body –
many also seen in fossils of Homo erectus and some in
Homo habilis – that enhanced the ability to run.
Only some of them were needed for walking. Traits that aided running
include leg and foot tendons and ligaments that act like springs,
foot and toe structure that allows efficient use of the feet to
push off, shoulders that rotate independently of the head and
neck to allow better balance, and skeletal and muscle features
that make the human body stronger, more stable and able to run
more efficiently without overheating.
“We explain the simultaneous emergence of a whole bunch
of anatomical features, literally from head to toe,” Bramble
says. “We have a hypothesis that gives a functional explanation
for how these features are linked to the unique mechanical demands
of running, how they work together and why they emerged at the
same time.”
Humans are poor sprinters compared with other running animals,
which is partly why many scientists have dismissed running as
a factor in human evolution. Human endurance running ability has
been inadequately appreciated because of a failure to recognize
that “high speed is not always important,” Bramble
says. “What is important is combining reasonable speed with
exceptional endurance.”
Another reason is that “scientists are in developed societies
that are highly dependent on technology and artificial means of
transport,” he adds. “But if those scientists had
been embedded in a hunter-gatherer society, they’d have
a different view of human locomotor abilities, including running.”
Why Did Humans Start Running?
The researchers do not know why natural selection favored human
ancestors who could run long distances. For one possibility, they
cite previous research by University of Utah biologist David Carrier,
who hypothesized that endurance running evolved in human ancestors
so they could pursue predators long before the development of
bows, arrows, nets and spear-throwers reduced the need to run
long distances.
Another possibility is that early humans and their immediate ancestors
ran to scavenge carcasses of dead animals – maybe so they
could beat hyenas or other scavengers to dinner, or maybe to “get
to the leftovers soon enough,” Bramble says.
Scavenging “is a more reliable source of food” than
hunting, he adds. “If you are out in the African savannah
and see a column of vultures on the horizon, the chance of there
being a fresh carcass underneath the vultures is about 100 percent.
If you are going to hunt down something in the heat, that’s
a lot more work and the payoffs are less reliable” because
the animal you are hunting often is “faster than you are.”
Anatomical Features that Help Humans Run
Here are anatomical characteristics that are unique to humans
and that play a role in helping people run, according to the study:
-- Skull features that help prevent overheating during running.
As sweat evaporates from the scalp, forehead and face, the evaporation
cools blood draining from the head. Veins carrying that cooled
blood pass near the carotid arteries, thus helping cool blood
flowing through the carotids to the brain.
-- A more balanced head with a flatter face, smaller teeth and
short snout, compared with australopithecines. That “shifts
the center of mass back so it’s easier to balance your head
when you are bobbing up and down running,” Bramble says.
-- A ligament that runs from the back of the skull and neck down
to the thoracic vertebrae, and acts as a shock absorber and helps
the arms and shoulders counterbalance the head during running.
-- Unlike apes and australopithecines, the shoulders in early
humans were “decoupled” from the head and neck, allowing
the body to rotate while the head aims forward during running.
-- The tall human body – with a narrow trunk, waist and
pelvis – creates more skin surface for our size, permitting
greater cooling during running. It also lets the upper and lower
body move independently, “which allows you to use your upper
body to counteract the twisting forces from your swinging legs,”
Bramble says.
-- Shorter forearms in humans make it easier for the upper body
to counterbalance the lower body during running. They also reduce
the amount of muscle power needed to keep the arms flexed when
running.
-- Human vertebrae and disks are larger in diameter relative to
body mass than are those in apes or australopithecines. “This
is related to shock absorption,” says Bramble. “It
allows the back to take bigger loads when human runners hit the
ground.”
-- The connection between the pelvis and spine is stronger and
larger relative to body size in humans than in their ancestors,
providing more stability and shock absorption during running.
-- Human buttocks “are huge,” says Bramble. “Have
you ever looked at an ape? They have no buns.” He says human
buttocks “are muscles critical for stabilization in running”
because they connect the femur – the large bone in each
upper leg – to the trunk. Because people lean forward at
the hip during running, the buttocks “keep you from pitching
over on your nose each time a foot hits the ground.”
-- Long legs, which chimps and australopithecines lack, let humans
to take huge strides when running, Bramble says. So do ligaments
and tendons – including the long Achilles tendon –
which act like springs that store and release mechanical energy
during running. The tendons and ligaments also mean human lower
legs that are less muscular and lighter, requiring less energy
to move them during running.
-- Larger surface areas in the hip, knee and ankle joints, for
improved shock absorption during running by spreading out the
forces.
-- The arrangement of bones in the human foot creates a stable
or stiff arch that makes the whole foot more rigid, so the human
runner can push off the ground more efficiently and utilize ligaments
on the bottom of the feet as springs.
-- Humans also evolved with an enlarged heel bone for better shock
absorption, as well as shorter toes and a big toe that is fully
drawn in toward the other toes for better pushing off during running.
The study by Bramble and Lieberman concludes: “Today, endurance
running is primarily a form of exercise and recreation, but its
roots may be as ancient as the origin of the human genus, and
its demands a major contributing factor to the human body form.”
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