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Life

Humans may have learned to walk in the trees

By Bob Holmes

12 August 2009

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Learning to walk

(Image: Frans Lanting/National Geographic/Getty)

EARLY humans may not have walked on their knuckles before they stood up on two feet. Instead, our ancestors walked upright in the trees and then set foot on the ground, according to a study comparing the wrist bones of our closest relatives.

Sceptics of this “trees to two feet” idea argue that the ancestor of all African apes, including gorillas, chimps and humans, must have been a knuckle-walker, because both gorillas and chimps knuckle-walk. They also have specialisations such as ridges and concavities on the wrist bones that keep the palm…

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