Did Human Evolution Include a Semi-Aquatic Phase?

A recent book outlines fossil evidence supporting the controversial hypothesis.

Written byPeter Rhys-Evans
| 3 min read

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ABOVE: ©istock.com, ehrlif

For the past 150 years, scientists and laypeople alike have accepted a “savanna” scenario of human evolution. The theory, primarily based on fossil evidence, suggests that because our ancestral ape family members were living in the trees of East African forests, and because we humans live on terra firma, our primate ancestors simply came down from the trees onto the grasslands and stood upright to see farther over the vegetation, increasing their efficiency as hunter-gatherers. In the late 19th century, anthropologists only had a few Neanderthal fossils to study, and science had very little knowledge of genetics and evolutionary changes. So this savanna theory of human evolution became ingrained in anthropological dogma and has remained the established explanation of early hominin evolution following the genetic split from our primate cousins 6 million to 7 million years ago.

But in 1960, a different twist on human evolution emerged. ...

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