WASHINGTON — Maybe walking upright on two legs isn’t such a defining human feature after all. Scientists who spent a year photographing orangutans in the rain forest say the trait probably evolved in ancient apes navigating the treetops long before ancestors of humans climbed to the ground — a hypothesis that contradicts science museum displays the world over. But it’s more in tune with fossil evidence, contends Robin Crompton of the University of Liverpool, who co-authored the report in today’s edition of the journal Science. ‘An increasing number of people have been questioning this old ‘up from the apes’ idea’ of how bipedalism evolved, Crompton said. The popular explanation: Some chimpanzee-like creature that dragged its knuckles on the ground descended from trees into grasslands, and gradually straightened up to walk like modern humans. Yet climate data and fossils of such creatures as the famed Lucy suggest that early ancestors of humans lived in forests for far longer, and could move on two or four legs. Think orangutans just swing around? Maybe in zoos. Actually, it is orangutans — not the chimps who genetically are humans’ closest relatives — that can walk most like people, […]

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