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  • People tell me I’m slow. Yeah well, youre slow. Everybody’s slow. Were all slow.

  • Yaaaaay!

  • If youve ever raced a cheetah and youre not named Usain Bolt, you probably lost. Or

  • heck if you even tried racing against your cat, I bet you still lost. From horses, to

  • dogs, to birds, it seems the entire animal kingdom is faster and stronger than we are.

  • Why? Well we evolved to fit into our own ecological niche. But even compared to our nearest relatives,

  • the chimpanzee and bonobos, we are considerably weaker. We weren’t always this way. According

  • to Dan Lieberman, a biological anthropologist at Harvard University, ourchimp-like ancestor

  • was like a power athlete that was much stronger and faster than humans, but they had no endurance."

  • But we traded our brawn for bigger brains and the ability to outrun our prey in a long

  • distance hunt.

  • When our ancestors evolved from being mostly tree dwellers to savannah walkers, they probably

  • traded strength and speed for endurance. This is creatively called the endurance hypothesis.

  • Some researchers believe that humans evolved a unique predatory style. Rather than a fast

  • and furious chase, like a cheetah or Vin Diesel, humans take the slow and steady, wear-down-your-prey-till-it-collapses-from-exhaustion

  • kind of action. And this takes very specific types of muscles. By comparison, cheetahs

  • have muscles that are tailored to reacting quickly so they can reach top speed of around

  • 70 miles per hour. But the tradeoff is they get exhausted quickly, they have no endurance.

  • While we can never run that fast, we can run for a long time, maybe longer than any other

  • animal. Sure less exciting than a high speed chase, but incredibly effective.

  • But youre also slow because youre weak! Don’t feel bad, we all are, comparatively

  • speaking. One of our closest relatives, the chimpanzee is about twice as strong as a human.

  • Because theyre arboreal and spend most of their time in trees, most of their strength

  • is concentrated in their arms.

  • Our ancestors probably had similar muscle strength to a chimpanzee around six million

  • years ago according to a study published in PLOS One. The researchers found that in the

  • few million years since, human beings evolved dramatically. Our brains got bigger, specifically

  • in our prefrontal cortex, the part that deals with long term goal planning. They found that

  • the prefrontal cortex was RADICALLY different in humans from that in chimpanzees, monkeys,

  • and mice. It seemed to have evolved 4 times faster than the other parts of the body. And

  • that’s because in part, humans started to evolve social structures that allowed us to,

  • say, work together as a team to take down bigger prey.

  • But there is a downside to a bigger brain. A bigger brain consumes more energy. Our brains

  • consume 20% of the energy we use, which is a lot compared to other animals. So where

  • did the energy come from? Maybe from our muscles.

  • The researchers also found our ancestor’s MUSCLES changed rapidly too. Very rapidly,

  • about 8 times faster than the rest of our body. So researchers believe that to deal

  • with the energy demands of a bigger brain, our ancestors evolved smaller muscles to compensate.

  • But more research is needed.

  • You may think this contradicts the Darwinian principle ofsurvival of the fittest,”

  • butfitin this context doesn’t mean physical fitness. It means an organism fits

  • in a niche long enough to reproduce, so the genetic lineage survives. And it’s not that

  • being a smart wimp is always better than being a big dumb ox or vice versa, it’s a matter

  • of what’s most beneficial for an organism based on its environment and competition.

  • If coming down from the trees and learning to make fire means one day your offspring

  • will populate the globe, it’s probably worth giving up looking like a species of Mr. Universes.

  • That’s evolution.

  • CTA video So you can’t outrun a cheetah but you can

  • definitely out-walk it. Julia covers the endurance hypothesis in more detail here.

  • If you had the option to be ripped but also couldn’t form basic sentences, would you

  • take it? Mash your keyboard in the comments, subscribe

  • for more, and I’ll see you next time on DNews.

People tell me I’m slow. Yeah well, youre slow. Everybody’s slow. Were all slow.

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