• The Giant Korean
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    2 days ago

    So this is pretty neat:

    https://www.science.org/content/article/born-run-early-endurance-running--may-have-evolved-help-humans-chase-down-prey

    Humans aren’t good at running fast, but we are good at running for a long time for long distances, so it’s thought that we would just run after things until they got tired.

    So like you know how people in horror movies would run and then look over their shoulder and Jason is somehow still there?

    • @Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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      242 days ago

      Funny enough there is another animal I know that can sweat, have more endurance than humans, and much faster than humans. Horses.

      Imagine you fear getting caught by a horse or a human and then suddenly a human riding a horse shows up.

    • TheLowestStone
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      2 days ago

      Back in my reddit days I wrote a long comment about the fact that zombies are scary because they are the ultimate persistence hunters.

      • @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world
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        111 day ago

        Zombies aren’t scary. They’re popular movie monsters because, while looking vaguely human, they’re sufficiently “othered” that you can kill them without remorse (thus acting as a convenient stand-in for other groups that the audience wishes they could do that to) and because they represent an apocalypse that kills most of the people but leaves the stuff behind, meaning that you don’t have to deal with society anymore but you’ll still easily have a roof over your head and food on your table (albeit mostly canned food.)

      • @exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        172 days ago

        It’s a few things that stem from bipedalism:

        • We can run and breathe entirely separately. Most quadrupeds lack the ability to run and take breaths independently of the pace of each step. Watching cheetahs sprint, for example, show that they have no choice but to exhale every time their legs come together and inhale every time their legs push apart.
        • Running on our hind legs only frees up our hands to be able to use tools and weapons, maybe even water containers for drinking on the go.
        • We can see further by standing up, and can make tactical decisions based on terrain, while still running pretty much full speed.

        Combined with our unusual ability to cool ourselves by sweating, this gives us an advantage over pretty much any animal in the heat. Wolves and horses can still outrun humans in the cold, but lack the cooling mechanisms to maintain pace in the same heat that we can.

        • Captain Aggravated
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          111 day ago

          We also have by far the best throwing game in the world. Some animals can spit with reasonable accuracy, some apes can kind of lob shit in a general direction, and there’s that one lizard that can spray blood from its eye, but nothing in the animal kingdom past or present has a human’s innate ability for ranged attack. The average man can throw a fist sized rock hard and accurate enough to crack a skull from 20 yards with his bare hand. And we’ve spent the last 10,000 years inventing newer and more impressive ways of throwing stuff.

        • @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Running on our hind legs only frees up our hands to be able to use tools and weapons, maybe even water containers for drinking on the go.

          And for wanking, although that may just be an adaptation to compensate for our inability to lick our own dicks.

      • @JimmyMcGill@lemmy.world
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        32 days ago

        Yea but also tools

        We don’t have to stop for water, we can bring some

        Same for food

        Our preys didn’t have such luck