When a person is asked about the difference between a person and an ape, the bipedal walking may be the last thing contemporary thinks. When people live in the world of technology invented by cars, planes, and computers, their feet seem natural. When referring to Albert Einstein, very few people will agree that his relativity is the second leg of two legs standing upright. However, if the first human race did not take these first steps, humans may not evolve into existing contemporary society.
This article outlines various theories of biped walking and aims to provide comprehensive answers to human evolution. There are two questions about the behavior of biped locomotion: i) Why is the earliest human part bipedal? And ii) Why will human beings become increasingly biped walking over time, replacing bipedal ancestors? In order to answer these questions, collective research has been conducted on prominent theories in fields such as savanna based theory, posture feeding hypothesis, supply model and so on. Because biological evolution is not a simple causal relationship, there may be multiple answers to the evolution of bipedalism. The posture feeding hypothesis (reaching food / balance) provides an explanation for the earliest human bipedal movement. Prairie-based theory explains how big bipedal walking people who started calm down to the ground more and more biped walked
Biped walking is a basic adaptation of primitive humans and is considered to be the main reason behind a series of bone changes common to all bipedal primitives. The earliest human, probably the behavior of the first bipedal walking, was thought to be Sahelanthropus or Orrorin. Both occurred about 6 million to 7 million years ago. Sahelanthropus and Orrorin may become our last common ancestor, as joints other than bipedalism - pacers, gorillas, chimpanzees are separated from the human body at the same time. Full bipedal walking algipitex appears later
Biped walking is a basic adaptation of the human system and is considered to be the main reason behind a series of bone changes common to all bipedal humans. The earliest bipedal humans were thought to be Sahelanthropus or Orrorin, Ardipithecus, completely biped. Knuckle walker, gorilla, chimpanzee diverge almost simultaneously, Sahelanthropus and Orrorin may be the last common ancestor of humans and these animals. The early bipedal animal finally evolved into a southern ape and later became a human being. There are several theories about the adaptive value of biped walking. Biped walking is preferred to release hands for carrying in contact with food to allow for long distance travel and hunting or to save energy during exercise by reducing exposure to direct sunlight It may be. Thermotherapy strategy