Why Didn't All Primates Evolve into Humans?

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Why Didn’t Every Primate Evolve into Human Beings? themindguild.com/why-didnt-every-primate-evolve-into-human-beings By Charlie Edgar

July 17, 2019

Edit As we humans were jet setting all over the world, creating farming and developing technologies, the chimpanzees of the world – who are considered our closest relatives – kept living in trees and eating fruit. It is pretty amazing to think about how much longer these chimps have been on the Earth as compared to humans. Many estimate that modern chimps have in existence for around one million years, while humans have been around for approximate 300,000 years. Edit

Do Humans and Chimps Share the Same Family Tree? However, humans and chimps started traveling on their own evolutionary paths about 6 million years ago. So when whenever we think of them as our ancient cousins, we last shared common family trees many years ago. The question now becomes why did one of those family tree branches achieve so much more than the other branch. Why did one species develop so much higher intelligence than the other?

Why Did One Species Develop so Rapidly? “The reason other primates aren’t evolving into humans is that they’re doing just fine,” stated Briana Pobiner, who is a paleoanthropologist from the famous Smithsonian Institute located in Washington, D.C. Every primate that is living today, which includes the mountain gorillas that live in Uganda, all those howler monkeys from the Americas, and even the stunning lemurs who live in Madagascar, have simply demonstrated that they are doing just fine living in their present habitats – which is where natural place them in the first place.

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