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This article is being continously censored by hecklers of the aquatic ape hypothesis.
[[File:Baby diving.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|alt=Submerged infant in a pool|Newborns float and hold their breath instinctively when submerged. This is argued to be one of many aquatic adaptations by proponents of the aquatic ape hypothesis.]]
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[[File:Gorilla tool use.png|thumbnail|300px|A female gorilla wades across a body of water. Observed bipedalism in many [[simian]] species in shallow water is argued as illustrative of the origin of human bipedalism.]]

The '''aquatic ape hypothesis''' ('''AAH''') or '''aquatic ape theory''' ('''AAT''') is a [[hypothesis]] about [[human evolution]], which posits that the [[Common descent|ancestors]] of modern humans spent a period of time [[aquatic adaptation|adapting to a semiaquatic existence]].<ref name=MorganAll>Select writings of Elaine Morgan on AAH:
* {{Cite book | last = Morgan | first = Elaine | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Descent of Woman | year = 1972 | publisher = Souvenir Press | isbn = 0-285-62700-7}}
* {{Cite book | last = Morgan | first = Elaine | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Aquatic Ape | year = 1982 | publisher = Stein & Day Pub | isbn = 0-285-62509-8}}
* {{Cite book | last = Morgan | first = Elaine | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Scars of Evolution | year = 1990 | publisher = Souvenir Press | isbn = 0-285-62996-4 }}
* {{Cite book | last = Morgan | first = Elaine | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Descent of the child | year = 1994 | month = | publisher = Souvenir Press | isbn = 0-285-63377-5 }}
* {{Cite book | last = Morgan | first = Elaine | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Aquatic Ape Hypothesis | year = 1997 | month = | publisher = Penguin | isbn = 0-285-63518-2 }}
* {{Cite book | last = Morgan | first = Elaine | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Naked Darwinist| year = 2008 | month = | publisher = Eildon Press | isbn = 0-9525620-3-0 }}</ref><ref name="VaneechoutteKuliukas2011">{{cite book|author1=Vaneechoutte M|author2= Kuliukas A |author3=Verhaegen M |title=Was Man More Aquatic In The Past? Fifty Years After Alister Hardy - Waterside Hypotheses Of Human Evolution | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=KX5XuWYKsLYC | year = 2011 | publisher = [[Bentham Science Publishers]] | isbn = 978-1-60805-244-8}}</ref>
AAH emerged from the observation that some traits that set humans apart from other [[primates]] have parallels in [[aquatic mammals]]. It was first proposed by German [[pathology|pathologist]] [[Max Westenhöfer]] in 1942, and then independently by English [[Marine biology|marine biologist]] [[Alister Hardy]] in 1960. After Hardy, the most prominent proponent was Welsh writer [[Elaine Morgan (writer)|Elaine Morgan]], who has written several books on the topic.

AAH is not accepted among the mainstream explanations of human evolution. The [[scientific consensus]] is that humans first evolved during a period of rapid climate fluctuation between wet and dry, and that most of the adaptations that distinguish humans from the great apes are adaptations to a terrestrial, as opposed to an earlier, arboreal environment. Few paleoanthropologists have explicitly evaluated AAH in scientific journals, and those that have reviewed the hypothesis have been critical. An extensive criticism appeared in a peer reviewed paper by John H. Langdon in 1997.<ref name="pmid9361254">{{cite journal |author=Langdon JH |title=Umbrella hypotheses and parsimony in human evolution: a critique of the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis |journal=J. Hum. Evol. |volume=33 |issue=4 |pages=479–94 |year=1997 |pmid=9361254 |doi=10.1006/jhev.1997.0146}}</ref> Langdon states that the AAH is one of many hypotheses attempting to explain human evolution through a single causal mechanism, and that the evolutionary fossil record does not support such a proposal; that the hypothesis is internally inconsistent, has less explanatory power than its proponents claim, and that alternative terrestrial hypotheses are much better supported. AAH is popular among laypeople and has continued support by a minority of scholars. Langdon attributes this to the attraction of simplistic single-cause theories over the much more complex, but better-supported models with multiple causality.

==History==
The German pathologist [[Max Westenhöfer]] (1871-1957) can be said to have worded an early version of AAH, which he labeled "the aquatile man" (German: ''aquatile Mensch''), which he described in several publications during the 1930s and 1940's. Westenhöfer was partially influenced by contemporary German [[National Socialism]] and disputed Charles Darwin's theory on the kinship between modern man and the great apes. As part of a complex and unique presentation of human evolution, he argued that a number of traits in modern humans derived from a fully aquatic existence in the open seas, and that humans only in recent times returned to land. In 1942, he stated: ''"The postulation of an aquatic mode of life during an early stage of human evolution is a tenable hypothesis, for which further inquiry may produce additional supporting evidence."''<ref>Westenhöfer Max (1942) ''Der Eigenweg des Menschen. Dargestellt auf Grund von vergleichend morphologischen Untersuchungen über die Artbildung und Menschwerdung''. Verlag der Medizinischen Welt, W. Mannstaedt & Co., Berlin. ASIN B004M99K6A</ref> Westenhöfer's aquatic thesis suffered from a number of inconsistencies and contradictions, and consequently he abandoned the concept in his writings on human evolution around the end of the [[world war II|Second World War]].<ref>Westenhöfer Max (1948) ''Die Grundlagen meiner Theorie vom Eigenweg des Menschen: Entwicklung, Menschwerdung, Weltanschauung''. Carl Winter Heidelberg. ISBN 978-3533019695.</ref>

Independently and ignorant of Westenhöfer's writings, marine biologist [[Alister Hardy]] (1896-1985) had since 1930 also hypothesized, that humans may have had ancestors more aquatic than previously imagined, although his work conversely was rooted in the Darwin consensus. As a young academic with a hypothesis belonging outside his field, and because he was aware of its inherent controversy, Hardy delayed reporting his idea for some thirty years. After he had become a respected academic and knighted for contributions to marine biology, Hardy finally voiced his thoughts in a speech to the [[British Sub-Aqua Club]] in Brighton on 5 March 1960. Several national newspapers reported distorted presentations of Hardy's ideas, which he countered by explaining them more fully in an article in ''[[New Scientist]]'' on 17 March 1960.<ref>{{cite journal | year = 1977 | title = Was there a Homo aquaticus? | journal = Zenith | first = Alister Clavering | last = Hardy | volume = 15 | issue = 1 | pages = 4–6 | accessdate = 2013-05-01}}</ref> Hardy defined his idea:
<blockquote>''My thesis is that a branch of this primitive ape-stock {[[hominoids]]} was forced by competition from life in the trees to feed on the sea-shores and to hunt for food, shell fish, sea-urchins etc., in the shallow waters off the coast. I suppose that they were forced into the water just as we have seen happen in so many other groups of terrestrial animals. I am imagining this happening in the warmer parts of the world, in the tropical seas where Man could stand being in the water for relatively long periods, that is, several hours at a stretch.''<ref name=Hardy1960>{{cite journal | author = Hardy, A. | year = 1960 | title = Was man more aquatic in the past | journal = [[New Scientist]] | volume = 7 | authorlink = Alister Hardy | pages = 642–645 | url = http://www.riverapes.com/AAH/Hardy/Hardy1960.pdf | archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20090326175059/http://www.riverapes.com/AAH/Hardy/Hardy1960.pdf | archivedate = 26 March 2009 | format = PDF }}. More legible version at [http://s230720565.websitehome.co.uk/elainemorgan/Hardy%20Article.pdf]</ref></blockquote>

The idea received some interest after the article was published,<ref name=Sauer1960>{{cite journal | author = Sauer, C O. | year = 1960 | title = Seashore – Primitive home of man? | journal = Proceedings of the American Philosopical Society | volume = 106 | issue =1 | pages = 41–47}}</ref> but was generally ignored by the [[scientific community]] thereafter. In 1967, the hypothesis was briefly mentioned in ''[[The Naked Ape]]'', a book by [[Desmond Morris]] (1928-) in which can be found the first use of the term "aquatic ape".<ref name=Morris1967>{{cite book | last = Morris | first = Desmond | title = The Naked Ape | year = 1967 | month = | page = 29 | publisher = McGraw-Hill | isbn = 0-09-948201-0 }}</ref>

While doing research for her book "The Descent of Woman" published in 1972, a book inspired by reading Morris' The Naked Ape, TV-writer [[Elaine Morgan (writer)|Elaine Morgan]] (1920-2013<ref name=BBC>{{cite news|title=Leading writer and feminist Elaine Morgan dies aged 92|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-23291733|accessdate=12 July 2013|date=12 July 2013}}</ref>) was struck by the potential explanatory power of Hardy's hypothesis. While elaborating on Hardy's suggestion, Morgan also sought to challenge what she considered a masculine domination of the debate on human evolution, and the satirical book became an international bestseller, making Morgan a popular figure in feminist movements and on various TV talkshows in, for example, the United States. Conversely, her scientific contributions, including her elaboration on Hardy's aquatic humans was effectively ignored by anthropology. Morgan has since been the force majeure behind the development of Hardy's original idea, which after a number of publications culminated in 1997 with the book "The Aquatic Ape Hypothesis", which, with its factual language and proper referencing, was aimed primarily at the academic community.<ref name="MorganAll" /><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.elainemorgan.me.uk/page15.html | title = Hardy's question | accessdate = 2013-01-07 | last = Morgan | first = E }}</ref>

In 1987 a symposium was held in [[Valkenburg aan de Geul|Valkenburg]], the Netherlands, to debate the pros and cons of AAH. The proceedings of the symposium were published in 1991 with the title "Aquatic Ape: Fact or fiction?".<ref name = Roede1991>{{cite book | last = Roede| first = Machteld | title = Aquatic Ape: Fact of Fiction: Proceedings from the Valkenburg Conference | year = 1991 | publisher = Souvenir Press | isbn = 0-285-63033-4}}</ref> The chief editor summarized the results of the symposium as failing to support the idea that human ancestors were aquatic, but there is also some evidence that they may have swum and fed in inland lakes and rivers, with the result that modern humans can enjoy brief periods of time spent in the water.<ref name = Reynolds1991>{{cite book | last = Reynolds| first = Vernon | title = Cold and Watery? Hot and Dusty? Our Ancestral Environment and Our Ancestors Themselves: an Overview (in Roede et al. 1991) | year = 1991 | page = 340 | publisher = Souvenir Press | isbn = 0-285-63033-4}}</ref>

Weaker versions of the hypothesis suggesting [[littoral zone|littoral]] feeding and wading rather than strong aquatic adaptation have since been proposed. These weaker versions of the hypothesis have not yet been scientifically explored.<ref name="Niemitz2010"/>

The context of the initial presentations of AAH (a popular essay and a political text) diverted attention away from the possible scientific merits of the hypothesis. It has never been seriously scrutinized and discussed within the field of [[paleoanthropology]]<ref name="pmid9361254"/> and most paleoanthropologists reject the AAH.<ref name="Dunsworth2007"/><ref name=McNeill>{{cite book | last = McNeill | first = D | year = 2000 | title = The Face: A Natural History | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=qcOvIc-LP_IC&pg=PA36 36–37] | isbn = 0-316-58812-1 | publisher = Back Bay }}</ref>

==Hypothesis==
AAH suggests that many features that distinguish humans from their nearest evolutionary relatives emerged because the ancestors of humans underwent a period when they were adapting to an aquatic or semi-aquatic way of life, but returned to terrestrial life before having become fully adapted to the aquatic environment. Variations within the hypothesis suggests these protohumans to have spent time either wading, swimming or diving on the shores of [[fresh water|fresh]], [[brackish water|brackish]] or [[saline water]]s and feeding on [[littoral zone|littoral]] resources.<ref name=Ellis1993>{{cite journal |author=Ellis D | title = Wetlands or Aquatic Ape? Availability of food resources | journal = Nutrition & Health |volume=9 |issue= 3|pages=205–217 | year = 1993 | pmid= |doi=10.1177/026010609300900306}}</ref> Various traits that have been proposed to indicate past adaptation to aquatic conditions and the return to land,<ref name="MorganAll" /> but generally the evidence provided for the AAH is equally well accounted for by land-based adaptations without needing to posit an aquatic phase of human development. Anatomical parallels with those of the modern primate species that swim, wade, dive, or use aquatic environments for [[thermoregulation]], [[display behavior]], range, diet, or [[predation]], but the behavioral parallels, e.g., between humans and the [[proboscis monkey]], could be facilitated by anatomical adaptations without having been the basis for them.<ref name="pmid9361254"/><ref name="Dunsworth2007">{{cite book|author= Dunsworth HM|title=Human Origins 101|pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=0juhJgGco5QC&pg=PA121 121] | year = 2007|publisher= [[ABC-CLIO]] | isbn=978-0-313-33673-7}}</ref><ref name="behrev">{{cite doi|10.1159/000252586}}</ref>
While most proto-human fossil sites are associated with wet conditions upon the death of the [[hominini|hominins]], this is not seen as evidence for the AAH since being buried in waterside sediment is one of the rare situations in which fossilization is likely to occur; paleontologists are aware of this preservation bias and expect fossils to be located near such sediments.<ref name="Dunsworth2007"/> There is no fossil evidence to support the AAH.<ref name = Rantala>{{cite doi | 10.1111/j.1469-7998.2007.00295.x}}</ref>

Several theoretical problems have been found with the AAH, and some claims made by the AAH have been challenged as having explanations aside from a period of aquatic adaptation.<ref name="pmid9361254"/> Review of the individual claims used as evidence for the AAH generally does not support the hypothesis overall, and most of these traits have an explanation within conventional theories of human evolution.<ref name="pmid9361254"/> Other authors have suggested that wading, food gathering and other interactions with watery environments may have provided a less extreme but still present role in human evolution.<ref name = Niemitz2010>{{Cite doi|10.1007/s00114-009-0637-3}}</ref><ref name=Ver2002>{{cite journal | author = Verhaegen, M. | coauthors = Puech, P.F.; Munro, S. | year = 2002 | title = Aquarboreal ancestors? | journal = Trends in Ecology & Evolution | volume = 17 | issue = 5 | pages = 212–217 | url = http://allserv.UGent.be/~mvaneech/OP%20Verhaegen%20final%20styled.doc.pdf | format = PDF | accessdate = 2007-10-29 | doi = 10.1016/S0169-5347(02)02490-4}}</ref><ref name=Ver2011>{{cite journal |author = Verhaegen, M. | coauthors = Munro, S. | year = 2011 |title = Pachyosteosclerosis suggests archaic Homo frequently collected sessile littoral foods |journal = HOMO: Journal of Comparative Human Biology | volume=62 |pages=237–247 | url= http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0018442X11000424 |doi = 10.1016/j.jchb.2011.06.002 |issue = 4}}</ref>

===Specific claims===
Proponents of the AAH have claimed that a number of specific features in [[Human evolution|hominin evolution]] suggests that water played a role in natural selection, and that specific traits shared by all humans can therefore be understood as adaptations to an aquatic environment. These claims have been criticized for only superficially supporting the hypothesis, and for not being supported by the fossil record. All of the features that proponents claim to explain by exposure to an aquatic environment have conventional explanations that are more accepted within the paleoanthropological community.
*'''Bipedalism'''. Proponents of AAH claim that [[bipedalism]] offers numerous advantages in water, including permitting deeper wading, improved balance and reduced strain on the [[back]], [[hip]]s and [[knee]]s as well as improved blood circulation.<ref name="Niemitz2010" /><ref name=Niemitz2002>{{cite journal |author=Niemitz C | authorlink = Carsten Niemitz |title = A Theory on the Evolution of the Habitual Orthograde Human Bipedalism – The "Amphibische Generalistentheorie" | journal = Anthropologischer Anzeiger |volume=60 |issue= |pages=3–66 | year = 2002 | pmid= |doi=}}</ref><ref name=Verhaegen1987>{{cite journal | author = Verhaegen M | year = 1987 | title = Origin of hominid bipedalism | journal = Nature | volume = 325 | pages = 305–6 | doi = 10.1038/325305d0 | issue=6102|bibcode = 1987Natur.325..305V }}</ref> But bipedialism also gives many advantages on land, particularly lower energy expenditure and the ability of long-distance running—which humans do better than most terrestrial mammals. Proponents of the AAH suggest that bipedalism is disadvantageous when comparing humans to medium-sized, terrestrial quadrupeds, but the fossil record shows that the evolution of humans from ape ancestors didn't include a period of quadrupedal locomotion. Instead, human evolution features mainly [[brachiation]], suspension and climbing as the primary method of transportation, with a gradual increase in bipedal locomotion over time. In addition, the elongated lower limbs of humans, which is explained by AAH proponents as improving swimming speeds, appears only after the evolution of the genus ''[[Homo]]'' <ref name="pmid9361254"/> and [[Biomechanics|biomechanical analysis]] indicates humans are far too poor swimmers to have derived from an ape ancestor that swam,<ref>{{cite book | author = Preuschoft H, Preuschoft S | chapter = The aquatic ape theory, seen from epistemological and palaeoanthropological viewpoints | editors = Roede M, Wind J, Patrick JM, Reynolds V | title = The aquatic ape: fact or fiction? The first scientific evaluation of a controversial theory of human evolution | location = London | publisher = [[Souvenir Press]] | year = 1991 | pages =142–173 }}</ref> and pre-human apes would face similar problems.<ref name = Jablonski2008/> There is no single accepted explanation for human bipedalism but freedom of the hands for tool use, carrying of infants, feeding adaptations, improved energy expenditure or some combination of these are suggested, with considerable diversity in pre-human skeletal adaptations that would assist in bipedalism.<ref name = McHenry>{{cite book | editors = Reynolds SC; Gallagher A | author = McHenry HM | chapter = Origin and diversity of early hominin bipedalism | title = African Genesis: Perspectives on Hominin Evolution | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=PrJ1lmjMakoC&pg=PA205 205–222] | year = 2012 | publisher = [[Cambridge University Press]] | isbn = 978-1-107-01995-9 }}</ref>
*'''Hairlessness'''. Morgan claimed the relatively hairless skin of humans was due to comparable adaptations in aquatic mammals and land-dwelling mammals that have aquatic ancestors as well as those that currently spend much of their time in wet conditions, and what [[Vellus hair|body hair]] humans do have follows the flow of water over the body.<ref name = Morgan1982>{{cite book | last = Morgan | first = E | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Aquatic Ape | year = 1982 | publisher = Stein & Day Pub | isbn = 0-285-62509-8}}</ref><ref name = Morgan1997>{{cite book | last = Morgan | first = Elaine | authorlink = Elaine Morgan (writer) | title = The Aquatic Ape Hypothesis| year = 1997 | publisher = Souvenir Press | isbn = 0-285-63518-2}}</ref> However, humans vary strongly in the amount and distribution of body hair<ref name = Laden/> and comparably sized mammals adapted to semi-aquatic lifestyles actually have dense, insulating fur<ref name = Jablonski2008/><ref name = Vanstrum2003>{{cite book |author=Vanstrum GS |title=The saltwater wilderness |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |location=Oxford [Oxfordshire] |year=2003 |pages= [http://books.google.com/books?id=qIvN0CboSb8C&pg=PA95 95] |isbn=0-19-515937-3 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate=}}</ref> or large, barrel-shaped bodies that retain heat well in water.<ref name = Jablonski2008/> Hairlessness is only an advantage for aquatic mammals such as [[whale]]s and [[dolphin]]s that have spent millions of years adapting to aquatic lifestyles involving diving, fast swimming and migration over long distances; such animals show considerable skeletal and cardiovascular adaptations to an aquatic environment.<ref name="pmid9361254"/><ref name = Jablonski2008>{{cite book |author=Jablonski NG | title = Skin a natural history |publisher= [[University of California Press]] |location = Berkeley |year= 2008 |pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=EYi9S3VtIGsC&pg=PA39 39–55] | chapter = Sweat | isbn = 0-520-25624-7 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate=}}</ref> Though a variety of explanations have been proposed for human hairlessness, the best-supported hypothesis involves improved cooling through [[perspiration]]; while fur helps cool inactive animals, hairless skin that sweats vigorously is much better at cooling humans who generate body heat through activity.<ref name = Jablonski2008/> Langdon, in his 1997 critique of the hypothesis, stated that the streamlining features attributed to hair follicle distribution and direction would be more reasonably achieved through changes in the shape of the skeleton and soft tissues.<ref name="pmid9361254"/>
*'''Descended larynx'''. The human [[larynx]] is situated in the throat rather than the [[nasal cavity]], a feature shared by some aquatic animals who use it to close off the [[Vertebrate trachea|trachea]] while diving and facilitates taking large breaths of air upon surfacing.<ref name="Morgan1997" /> However, other terrestrial mammals, such as the [[red deer]], also have a permanently descended larynx.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Fitch, W. Tecumseh|coauthor=Reby D.|journal=Proc. R. Soc. B. |year=2001|volume=268|pages=1669–1675|doi=10.1098/rspb.2001|pmid=11506679|title=The descended larynx is not uniquely human|issue=1477|pmc=1088793}}</ref> Humans also have a considerable amount of control over their breathing, which is an involuntary reflex for most terrestrial mammals.<ref name=Niemitz2002/><ref name="Morgan1997" /> However, breath control is thought to be preceded by bipedalism, which frees up the muscles of the upper torso from locomotion and allows breathing independent of limb position. Both of these adaptations are thought to derive from improvements in [[Speech production|vocalization]] and the evolution of the ability to speak<ref name="pmid9361254"/><ref>{{cite journal | author = MacLarnon, A.M. | coauthors = Hewitt, G.P. | year = 1999 | title = The evolution of human speech: The role of enhanced breathing control | journal = American Journal of Physical Anthropology | volume = 109 | issue = 3 | pages = 341–363 | doi = 10.1002/(SICI)1096-8644(199907)109:3<341::AID-AJPA5>3.3.CO;2-U | pmid = 10407464}}</ref> and the human larynx is shaped differently from that of aquatic animals, predisposing humans to choking.<ref name="pmid9361254"/>
*'''Encephalization'''. Morgan<ref name="Morgan1997" /> and several other authors<ref>{{cite pmid |10419087}}</ref><ref name=Venturi>{{cite book | last = Venturi | first = S | coauthors = Bégin ME | year = 2010 | chapter = Thyroid Hormone, Iodine and Human Brain Evolution | title= Environmental Influences on Human Brain Evolution | editors = Cunnane S; Stewart K | publisher = [[John Wiley & Sons]] | pages = [http://books.google.ca/books?id=gfkRnv20GtsC&pg=PA105#v=onepage&q&f=false 105–124] | isbn = 978-0-470-45268-4}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | author = Crawford MA | year = 2010 | chapter= Long-Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids in Human Brain Evolution | title = Environmental Influences on Human Brain Evolution | editors = Cunnane S; Stewart K| publisher = [[John Wiley & Sons]] | isbn = 978-0-470-45268-4 | pages = [http://books.google.ca/books?id=gfkRnv20GtsC&pg=PA13#v=onepage&q&f=false 13–32] }}</ref> have suggested that the [[encephalization]] of the human brain was a response to increased consumption of [[fatty acids]] and [[iodine]] found in fish and in seafood. However, considerable human encephalization began quite late in the development of the genus Homo, long after the development of bipedalism. Bipedalism had occurred already in the [[Australopithecus|australopithecines]] (4.2–3.9 mya) and ''[[Ardipithecus]]'' (4.4 mya), and perhaps as early as in the species ''[[Sahelanthropus tchadensis]]'' (approx. 7 mya). On the other hand increase in [[cranial capacity]] occurs quite late in the fossil record: ''[[Homo habilis]]'' (approx. 2 mya) for example, while fully bipedal, had a brain size within the range of modern day [[gorilla]]s. Critics have also pointed out that landlocked humans without access to fish develop normal brains<ref name="pmid9361254"/> and these nutritional requirements are easily met with a land-based diet.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Carlson BA, Kingston JD |title=Docosahexaenoic acid biosynthesis and dietary contingency: Encephalization without aquatic constraint |journal=Am. J. Hum. Biol. |volume=19 |issue=4 |pages=585–588 |year=2007 | pmid=17546613 |doi=10.1002/ajhb.20683}}</ref><ref name = Milton>{{cite journal | last = Milton | first = K | year = 2000 | title = Reply to S.C. Cunnane | journal = [[The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition]] | volume = 72 | issue = 6 | pages = 1586–1588 | url = http://www.ajcn.org/content/72/6/1586.full }}</ref> The encephalization of early ''Homo'' species predated the appearance of humans exploiting waterside food sources by over 400,000 years, driven by the consumption of hunted or scavenged animal [[brain]]s supplying large amounts of scarce nutrients including [[docosahexaenoic acid]].<ref name = Milton/><ref name = Kuzawa>{{cite journal | last = Kuzawa | first = C | title = Book Reviews: Survival of the Fattest | journal = American Journal of Physical Anthropology | volume = 132 | pages = 158–9 | doi = 10.1002/ajpa.20484 | year = 2007 }}</ref>

===Theoretical considerations===
The AAH has been criticized for containing multiple inconsistencies and lacking evidence from the [[Fossil|fossil record]] to support its claims<ref name="pmid9361254"/><ref name = Rantala/><ref name = Zihlman1991>{{cite web | last = Zihlman | first = A | publisher = [[New Scientist]] | title = Review: Evolution, a suitable case for treatment | url = http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg12917525.300.html | archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080123085610/http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg12917525.300.html | archivedate = 30 December 2008 | date = 19 January 1991 | accessdate = 2009-05-03}}</ref> (Morgan, for instance, failed to discuss any fossils found after 1960 and much of her analysis is by comparing soft tissues between humans and aquatic species).<ref name="pmid9361254"/> It is also described as lacking [[Parsimony#Science|parsimony]], despite purporting to be a simple theory uniting many of the unique anatomical features of humans.<ref name="pmid9361254"/> Anthropologist [[John D. Hawks]] expresses the view that rather than explaining human traits simply and parsimoniously, it actually requires two explanations for each trait - first that proximity to water drove human evolution enough to significantly change the human [[phenotype]] and second that there was significant [[evolutionary pressure]] beyond mere [[phylogenetic inertia]] to maintain these traits (which would not be adaptive on dry land) and points out that [[exaptation]] is not an adequate reply. Hawks concludes by saying:
<blockquote>In other words, the Aquatic Ape Theory explains all of these features, but it explains them all twice. Every one of the features encompassed by the theory still requires a reason for it to be maintained after hominids left the aquatic environment. Every one of these reasons probably would be sufficient to explain the evolution of the traits in the absence of the aquatic environment. This is more than unparsimonious. It leaves the Aquatic Ape Theory explaining nothing whatsoever about the evolution of the hominids. This is why professional anthropologists reject the theory, even if they haven't fully thought through the logic.<ref name = Hawks>{{cite web | url = http://johnhawks.net/weblog/topics/pseudoscience/aquatic_ape_theory.html | title = Why anthropologists don't accept the Aquatic Ape Theory | date = 25 January 2005 | accessdate = 2012-02-25 | last = Hawks | first = JD | authorlink = John D. Hawks }}</ref></blockquote>

Ellen White describes Morgan's work as failing to be [[empirical research|empirical]], not addressing evidence that contradicts the hypothesis, relying on comparative anatomy rather than [[Natural selection|selection pressure]], not predicting any new evidence and failing to address its own shortcomings. White stated that while the hypothesis had the scientific characteristics of explanatory power and public debate, the only reason it has received any actual scholarly attention is due to its public appeal, ultimately concluding the AAH was [[Scientific method|unscientific]].<ref name = White/> Others have similarly noted the AAH "is more an exercise in comparative anatomy than a theory supported by data."<ref name = Discover>{{cite web | last = Ornes | first = S | year = 2007 | publisher = [[Discover (magazine)|Discover]] | url = http://discovermagazine.com/2007/nov/whatever-happened-to-the-aquatic-ape-hypothesis | title = Whatever Happened To... the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis? | accessdate = 2012-03-07 }}</ref>

Though describing the hypothesis as plausible, [[Henry Gee]] went on to criticize it for being untestable, as most of the evolutionary adaptations described by Morgan would not have fossilized. Gee also stated that, while purely aquatic mammals such as whales show strong skeletal evidence of adaptation to water, humans and human fossils lack such adaptations (a comment made by others as well<ref name = Rantala/>); that there are many hypothetical and equally plausible scenarios explaining the unique characteristics of human adaptation without involving an aquatic phase of evolution; and that proponents are basing arguments about past adaptations on present physiology, when humans are not significantly aquatic.<ref>{{cite book | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=TInB03o5uegC&pg=PA100 100–101] | last = Gee | first = H | authorlink = Henry Gee | publisher = [[Cornell University Press]] | title = In search of deep time: beyond the fossil record to a new history of life | year = 2001 | isbn = 0-8014-8713-7 }}</ref> There is ultimately only [[circumstantial evidence]] to suggest, and no solid evidence to support the AAH.<ref name = Meier>{{cite book | last = Meier | first = R | title = The complete idiot's guide to human prehistory | publisher = Alpha Books | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-02-864421-2 | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=r_Wit4KYSmMC&pg=PA57 57–59]}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=0Zim5e65ij4C&pg=PA64 64] | title = Psychology & evolution: the origins of mind | isbn = 0-7619-2479-5 | last = Bridgeman | first = B | publisher = [[SAGE Publications]] | year = 2003 }}</ref> [[ScienceBlogs]] author Greg Laden has described the AAH as a "human evolution [[theory of everything]]" that attempts to explain all anatomical and physiological features of humans and is correct in some areas only by chance. Laden also states that the AAH was proposed when knowledge of human evolutionary history was unclear, while more recent research has found that many human traits have emerged at different times over millions of years, rather than simultaneously due to a single evolutionary pressure.<ref name = Laden>{{cite web | last = Laden | first = G | date = 4 August 2009 | accessdate = 2009-09-02 | publisher = [[ScienceBlogs]] | url = http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2009/08/musings_on_the_aquatic_ape_the.php | title = Musings on the Aquatic Ape Theory }}</ref>

Evolutionary biologist [[Carsten Niemitz]] states that he believes the AAH as expressed by Morgan didn't fulfill the criteria of a theory or a hypothesis, merely "[listing] analogies of features of savannah type mammals on the one hand and of aquatic mammals and man on the other, asking the scientific community for explanations other than a common aquatic ancestor of extant man."<ref name="Niemitz2010"/>

Marc Verhaegen has also challenged the AAH as expressed by Morgan, believing the ancestors of apes as well as humans may have had their evolutionary history influenced by exposure to flooded forest environments,<ref name="Ver2002" /> and that based on the hominin fossil record, regular part-time underwater foraging began in the Pleistocene rather than the early Pliocene as Morgan’s model proposes.<ref name="Ver2011" />

In 2012 Langdon reviewed an [[e-book]] published by [[Bentham Science Publishers]] collecting 50 years of theorizing about the AAH.<ref name="VaneechoutteKuliukas2011" /> In his review,<ref name = "Langdon2012"/> Langdon noted the lack of a single "aquatic ape hypothesis", instead there are multiple hypotheses with a common theme of [[evolutionary pressure]] due to dependence on an aquatic habitat. While original versions thought to explain an apparently substantial gap between humans and closely related [[common ancestors]], more recent variants of these hypotheses have had to adjust to the fact that the gap was more apparent than real and the significant commonalities found between humans and other African apes. Three main strands of thought now exist regarding the AAH, varying according to when the theorized aquatic phase occurred - from the [[Middle Miocene]] to approximately three million years ago (Hardy's original model, which was based on a large gap in the [[fossil record]] that has since been filled in), from the [[Early Miocene]] when ancestral hominids were thought to wade in costal swamps and from which ''Homo'' species were thought to split off and adapt to swimming and diving (associated with the work of Marc Verhaegen), and from 200,000 years ago when exploitation of costal resources led humans out of Africa and resulted in the evolution of modern humans (associated with the work of Algis Kuliukas). Langdon notes the strong associations of humans with water, as well as the adaptability of the species to incredibly diverse ecological niches (including costal and wetland regions), both within and across lifetimes. Whether these associations define humans as "semiaquatic" or not "represents a fundamental point of departure between anthropologists and the [Aquatic Hypothesis] community." Langdon notes the three lines of evidence cited to support the AAH (comparative anatomy between humans and other semiaquatic species; hypothetical situations in which evolutionary pressure might have produced [[convergent evolution]] between humans and semiaquatic species; the ability for humans to perform various activities in the water) and concludes about these lines of evidence,<ref name = "Langdon2012"/>
<blockquote>These rhetorical strategies create long lists of claims, but until each hypothesis is independently established, it does not constitute evidence for an aquatic scenario. At best it shows consistency with a prior assumption. Evolutionary convergence – structural similarity – by itself is a metaphor for functional similarity. Metaphors are useful, but they demand that we examine points of resemblance closely in order to learn whether they are meaningful. Like metaphors, evolutionary convergences have their limits: eventually differences will emerge. Dolphins and humans are similar in the loss of body hair, relatively large brains, and complex vocal capacities; but these similarities do not make us dolphins. Nor is it clear which, if any of these similarities are related to water. Each trait must be investigated and resolved as a separate functional and evolutionary question. Unproven suppositions cannot serve as evidence for other hypotheses.</blockquote>
Langdon criticizes the alleged "parsimony" of the AAH irrelevant as it is used to generate hypotheses about human adaptation - but does not prove them. The AAH is, like many [[Just-so story|Just So Stories]] in anthropology, ignored less because of prejudice than because of a lack of [[empirical evidence]] to support it, because it engages only with supporting evidence in the relevant [[scientific literature]] while ignoring the larger body of unsupporting evidence, and because its hypotheses are portrayed as "compatible with" more accepted hypotheses and thus unable to distinguish between or provide explicit evidence for the AAH. Langdon concludes his review:<ref name = "Langdon2012">{{cite doi | 10.1016/j.jchb.2012.06.001 }}</ref>
<blockquote>It is now incumbent upon both authors and critics to clarify the assumptions with which they are working and, where possible, to make empirically testable predictions. Similarly, the many gloating references in this book to the collapse of the Savannah Hypothesis should not suggest that all terrestrial models have been challenged. Possibly the time has come to bring the “paradigms” together; to step out of the “us vs. them” mentality held by both sides of this debate; and simply to recognize that dozens of speculative hypotheses for human evolution exist in the literature that may or may not discuss a relationship with water.</blockquote>

The authors of the volume published a reply.<ref>{{cite doi|10.1016/j.jchb.2012.09.003}}</ref>

==Reception==
The AAH has received little serious attention or acceptance from mainstream [[Paleoanthropology|paleoanthropologists]],<ref name="Dunsworth2007"/><ref name=McNeill/><ref name = Medler>{{cite doi | 10.4996/fireecology.0701013}}</ref><ref name=Trauth>{{cite doi | 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.07.007}}</ref> has been met with significant skepticism<ref name="Trauth" /><ref name = Graham2008>{{cite book | isbn = 3-540-69930-9 | title = Pediatric ENT | last = Graham | first = JM | coauthors = Scadding GK; Bull PD | year = 2008 | publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]] | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=laEQt_Vp3ngC&pg=PA27 27]}}</ref> and is not considered a strong scientific hypothesis.<ref name="Dunsworth2007"/><ref name = Discover/> The AAH does not appear to have passed the [[peer review]] process, and despite Morgan being praised by various scholars, none of her work has appeared in any [[academic journal]]s of anthropology or related disciplines.<ref name = White>{{cite journal | last = White | first = E | title = The Peer Review Process: Benefit or Detriment to Quality Scholarly Journal Publication | journal = Totem: the University of Western Ontario Journal of Anthropology | volume = 13 | issue = 1 | year = 2005 | pages = 52–60 | url = http://ir.lib.uwo.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1185&context=totem&sei-redir=1&referer=http%3A%2F%2Fscholar.google.ca%2Fscholar%3Fhl%3Den%26q%3D%2522aquatic%2Bape%2522%26as_sdt%3D0%252C5%26as_ylo%3D2010%26as_vis%3D0#search=%22aquatic%20ape%22 | format = PDF }}</ref> The AAH is thought by some anthropologists to be accepted readily by popular audiences, students and non-specialist scholars because of its simplicity.<ref name="pmid9361254"/> In 1987 a symposium was held in [[Valkenburg aan de Geul|Valkenburg]], the Netherlands, titled "Aquatic Ape: Fact or fiction?", which published its proceedings in 1991.<ref name="Roede1991" /> A review of Morgan's book ''The Scars of Evolution'' stated that it did not address the central questions of anthropology – how the human and [[chimpanzee]] gene lines diverged – which was why it was ignored by the scholarly community. The review also stated that Morgan ignored the fossil record and skirted the absence of evidence that [[australopithecine]] underwent any adaptations to water, making the hypothesis impossible to validate from fossils.<ref name = Zihlman1991/>

Morgan has claimed the AAH was rejected for a variety of reasons unrelated to its explanatory power: old academics were protecting their careers, sexism on the part of male researchers, and her status as a non-academic intruding on academic debates. Despite modifications to the hypothesis and occasional forays into scientific conferences, the AAH has neither been accepted as a mainstream theory nor managed to venture a genuine challenge to orthodox theories of human evolution.<ref>{{cite book | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=S-bkQwPGY2YC&pg=PA208 208–212] | last = Regal | first = B | publisher = [[ABC-CLIO]] | title = Human evolution: a guide to the debates | isbn = 1-85109-418-0 | year = 2004}}</ref>

Morgan's critics have claimed that the appeal of AAH can be explained in several ways:<ref name="pmid9361254"/>
#The hypothesis appears to offer absolute answers, which appeals more to students and the public than the qualified and reserved explanations offered by mainstream science.
#Unusual ideas challenge the authority of science and scientists, which appeals to [[anti-establishment]] sentiments.
#The AAH as developed by Morgan has a strong [[feminism|feminist]] component, which particularly appeals to a specific, feminist audience.
#The AAH can be explained simply and easily, lacking the myriad details and complicated theorizing involved in dealing with primary sources and materials.
#The AAH uses negative arguments, pointing to the flaws and gaps in conventional theories; though the criticisms of mainstream science and theories can be legitimate, the flaws in one theory do not automatically prove a proposed alternative.
#The consensus views of conventional anthropology are complicated, require specialized knowledge and qualified answers, and the investment of considerable time to understand.

[[John D. Hawks]], along with [[PZ Myers]] and fellow [[ScienceBlogs]] paleontologist Greg Laden recommend the website "Aquatic Ape Theory: Sink or Swim?" by Jim Moore as a resource on the topic.<ref name = Laden/><ref>{{cite web | url = http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2009/08/oh_no_not_the_aquatic_ape_hypo.php | title = Oh, no, not the Aquatic Ape hypothesis! | date = 4 August 2009 | accessdate = 2012-02-25 | last = Myers | first = PZ | publisher = [[ScienceBlogs]] }}
* {{cite web | url = http://www.aquaticape.org/ | title = Aquatic Ape Theory: Sink or Swim? | accessdate= 2012-02-25 | last = Moore | first = J }}</ref>

Anthropologist [[Colin Groves]] has stated that Morgan's theories are sophisticated enough that they should be taken seriously as a possible explanation for hominin divergence<ref>{{cite book | last = Groves| first = Colin (with David W.Cameron) | title = Bones, Stones and Molecules | year = 2004 | pages = [http://books.google.com/books?id=SwzHI1vesyIC&pg=PA68 68] | publisher = Elsevier Academic Press | isbn = 0-12-156933-0}}</ref> and Carsten Niemitz has found more recent, weaker versions of the hypothesis more acceptable, approaching some of his own theories on human evolution.<ref name="Niemitz2010"/>

In a 2012 paper, anthropologist [[Phillip V. Tobias|Philip Tobias]] noted that rejection of the AAH led to stigmatization of a spectrum of topics related to the evolution of humans and their interaction with water. The result of this bias, in his and co-authors opinions, was an incomplete reconstruction of human evolution within varied landscapes.<ref>{{cite pmid| 23272598 }}</ref>

==See also==
{{Portal|Evolutionary biology}}
*[[Endurance running hypothesis]]

==Footnotes==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}

==External links==
*{{DMOZ|/Science/Biology/Evolution/Human/Aquatic_Ape_Theory/}} - other web resources
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/science/scarsofevolution.shtml Scars of Evolution], podcast of two part BBC Radio 4 feature on AAH, broadcasted in 2005
*[http://www.ted.com/talks/elaine_morgan_says_we_evolved_from_aquatic_apes.html Presentation] by Elaine Morgan at [[TED (conference)|TED]] July, 2009; [http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2009/08/my_critique_of_morgans_aquatic.php Comment] on [[ScienceBlogs]] by paleoanthropologist Greg Laden

{{DEFAULTSORT:Aquatic Ape Hypothesis}}
[[Category:Human evolution]]
[[Category:Hypothetical life forms]]
[[Category:Aquatic organisms]]

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{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2013}}

Revision as of 11:03, 8 September 2013

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