Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Roger Wescott's "Upright Display Scenario"

I bet there are some of us out there that wonders how our hominin ancestors started to walk bipedally. They didn't just stood up and walked upright, that's for sure. One good explanation is that they first evolved a bipedal gait, not bipedal locomotion. Many scenarios had been set forth to imagine how the evolution of bipedalism had occurred.

Roger Westcott in 1967 proposed the "Upright Display Scenario" as one of the causes of bipedality, other causes include carrying tools and looking over tall grass while scavenging or predator avoidance. He suggests that bipedal behavior was adaptive because it made the bipedalist appear taller to intimidate their protagonists (other males) and predators. He also suggests that these displays were frequent and impressive. Westcott draws his scenario from threat display behaviors exhibit by the African apes; gorillas and chimpanzees.

Westcott proposed that early hominins had agonistic interactions which includes "two-legged standing or running, probably accompanied by fist-shaking or arm-waving, and possibly involving the seizing and brandishing of sticks or stones" (Parker and Jaffe, 2008).

Chimpanzee upright aggression. Photo from Why Files.

Citation:
Parker S.T. Jaffe K.E. 2008. Darwin's Legacy: Scenarios in Human Evolution. Plymouth, United Kingdom: AltaMira Press.

8 comments:

Marcel F. Williams said...

Obligatory bipedalism in hominins is clearly a semiaquatic adaptation that first emerged in the swamp ape, Oreopithecus bambalii, on the island of Tuscany-Sardian during the late Miocene. Obligatory bipedalism in archosaurs (dinosaurs, birds and their thecondont ancestors) also appears to have been of semiaquatic origin.

To see a video of a living model of how this could have occurred, see my blog post:

David Attenborough on the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis
http://newpapyrusmagazine.blogspot.com/2009/02/david-attenborough-on-aquatic-ape.html

or read a few of my papers on this subject:

Cranio-dental evidence of a hominin-like hyper- masticatory apparatus in Oreopithecus bambolii. Was the swamp ape a human ancestor? (2008) Bioscience Hypotheses

The adaptive significance of endothermy and salt excretion amongst the earliest archosaurs (1997) Speculations in Science & Technology

Morphological evidence of marine adaptations in human kidneys (2006) Medical Hypotheses


http://newpapyrusmagazine.blogspot.com/

Raymond Vagell said...

I'm not too familiar with Oreopithecus but there is always a possibility that bipedality is an adaptation to semiaquatic habitat.

One thing I am unsure of is where Oreopithecus would fit in the hominin evolutionary tree. Are they before or after Dryopithecus?

Marcel F. Williams said...

Oreopithecus is dated between 7.5 and 7.6 million years ago. It was isolated on the island of Tuscany-Sardinia for nearly 2 million years and is probably descended from the African hominoid, Mabokopithecus. In my paper,I did an extensive comparison of the Oreopithecus cranio-dental morphology with other hominoid primates including Sahelanthropus which Oreopithecus was extremely similar to.

Anyone who wants a pdf copy of my Bioscience Hypotheses Oreopithecus paper can email me at: newpapyrus@yahoo.com

Marcel

Raymond Vagell said...

Thanks Marcel!

Marc Verhaegen said...

Thanks, Marcel.
Roger Wescott, after learning about Hardy's theory, became a great promotor of the waterside theory of human evolution, eg, his article "The pardoxical primate: a review of the aquatic ape." For several years we had an intense correspondence on AAT, language origins, etc., and Roger published our paper "Bipeds, tools and speech" in Mother Tongue, 1999. Unfortunately, Roger died a few years ago.
For my view on the origins of bipedalism, please google "aquarboreal" (which BTW is a word coined by Marcel Williams).

Raymond Vagell said...

Thanks for the comment, Marc.

Would you like to share with us what Mother Tongue is?

aquape said...

Sorry for this belated answer, Raymond. This thread was about Roger Wescott's Upright Display Scenario. Roger, like me interested in human evolution & speech origins, was co-editor of Mother Tongue, a journal on language origins. After he had heard of the littoral theory of human evolution (eg, google "econiche Homo"), he believed that human bipedality had to do with our waterside past, and that breathing control for diving for seafood was a preadaptation to the evolution of human speech.

Raymond Vagell said...

Ah, thanks for the clarification!