A paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islands

The aquatic ape hypothesis for human evolution can account for all the traits that distinguish humans from chimpanzees. This scientific paradigm has been considered impossible. It would require that human ancestors maintained a semiaquatic lifestyle for millions of years, whereas hominin fossils in...

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Main Author: Allan George Krill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Queen's University 2020-01-01
Series:Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
Online Access:https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/IEE/article/view/13560
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spelling doaj-a501d982539842f999fc419f39e107092020-11-25T01:53:44ZengQueen's UniversityIdeas in Ecology and Evolution1918-31782020-01-011310.24908/iee.2020.13.1.nA paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islandsAllan George Krill0Department of Geosciences and Petroleum, Norwegian University of Science and Technology The aquatic ape hypothesis for human evolution can account for all the traits that distinguish humans from chimpanzees. This scientific paradigm has been considered impossible. It would require that human ancestors maintained a semiaquatic lifestyle for millions of years, whereas hominin fossils indicate relatively dry terrestrial environments. Here I propose a marine aquatic evolution that is speculative, but compatible with all the fossil and genetic evidence. In this hypothesis, hominins evolved from chimpanzee-like apes that became stranded on proto-Bioko — new volcanic islands with no terrestrial foods available. The apes were forced to eat shellfish and seaweed. From wading in water on two legs to obtain food, their bodies evolved to become bipedal. Naked skin, blubber, and protruding noses were also aquatic adaptations. Brain-size increase resulted from marine fatty acid DHA. Some of these hominins escaped to mainland Africa and their bipedal descendants are recorded at the famous fossil sites. The volcanic islands grew and evolved into Bioko, and the hominins that remained there evolved into Homo sapiens. They gave up their marine diet and semiaquatic habitat after food became available on the evolving island. Then, during one of the low sea-level stands in the Pleistocene epoch, humans walked to the mainland on the emergent Bioko land bridge. Unlike earlier aquatic ape ideas, the Bioko scenario can be tested by DNA. If the human genome includes a retrovirus that is otherwise only found in endemic animals on Bioko, it would show that our ancestors came from there. Unfortunately, Bioko and west-central Africa are not interesting to traditional paleoanthropologists, because they do not contain fossils. https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/IEE/article/view/13560
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allan George Krill
spellingShingle Allan George Krill
A paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islands
Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
author_facet Allan George Krill
author_sort Allan George Krill
title A paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islands
title_short A paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islands
title_full A paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islands
title_fullStr A paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islands
title_full_unstemmed A paradigm for the evolution of human features: Apes trapped on barren volcanic islands
title_sort paradigm for the evolution of human features: apes trapped on barren volcanic islands
publisher Queen's University
series Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
issn 1918-3178
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The aquatic ape hypothesis for human evolution can account for all the traits that distinguish humans from chimpanzees. This scientific paradigm has been considered impossible. It would require that human ancestors maintained a semiaquatic lifestyle for millions of years, whereas hominin fossils indicate relatively dry terrestrial environments. Here I propose a marine aquatic evolution that is speculative, but compatible with all the fossil and genetic evidence. In this hypothesis, hominins evolved from chimpanzee-like apes that became stranded on proto-Bioko — new volcanic islands with no terrestrial foods available. The apes were forced to eat shellfish and seaweed. From wading in water on two legs to obtain food, their bodies evolved to become bipedal. Naked skin, blubber, and protruding noses were also aquatic adaptations. Brain-size increase resulted from marine fatty acid DHA. Some of these hominins escaped to mainland Africa and their bipedal descendants are recorded at the famous fossil sites. The volcanic islands grew and evolved into Bioko, and the hominins that remained there evolved into Homo sapiens. They gave up their marine diet and semiaquatic habitat after food became available on the evolving island. Then, during one of the low sea-level stands in the Pleistocene epoch, humans walked to the mainland on the emergent Bioko land bridge. Unlike earlier aquatic ape ideas, the Bioko scenario can be tested by DNA. If the human genome includes a retrovirus that is otherwise only found in endemic animals on Bioko, it would show that our ancestors came from there. Unfortunately, Bioko and west-central Africa are not interesting to traditional paleoanthropologists, because they do not contain fossils.
url https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/IEE/article/view/13560
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