First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us Human

First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us Human

First Steps by Jeremy DeSilva is a fascinating and readable insight into How Upright Walking Made Us Human. Humans are the only mammals to walk on two, rather than four legs—a locomotion known as bipedalism. We strive to be upstanding citizens, honor those who stand tall and proud, and take a stand against injustices. We follow in each other’s footsteps and celebrate a child’s beginning to walk. But why, and how, exactly, did we take our first steps? And at what cost? Bipedalism has its drawbacks: giving birth is more difficult and dangerous; our running speed is much slower than other animals; and we suffer a variety of ailments, from hernias to sinus problems.

In First Steps, paleoanthropologist Jeremy DeSilva explores how unusual and extraordinary this seemingly ordinary ability is. A seven-million-year journey to the very origins of the human lineage, First Steps shows how upright walking was a gateway to many of the other attributes that make us human—from our technological abilities, our thirst for exploration, our use of language–and may have laid the foundation for our species’ traits of compassion, empathy, and altruism. Moving from developmental psychology labs to ancient fossil sites throughout Africa and Eurasia, DeSilva brings to life our adventure walking on two legs.

Delving deeply into the story of our past and the new discoveries rewriting our understanding of human evolution, First Steps examines how walking upright helped us rise above all over species on this planet.

First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us HumanPurchase First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us Human here:
Amazon.comAmazon.caAmazon.ukAmazon.au
Fishpond.nzBook Depository (free world wide shipping)We get commissions for purchases made through links on this website. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

“A book that strides confidently across this complex terrain, laying out what we know about how walking works, who started doing it and when. DeSilva proposes that our bipedalism is at the root of our uniqueness as a species, and the book is carefully structured, neatly braiding his own research with the wider narrative and history of human evolution. . . . DeSilva is a genial companion on this stroll through the deep origins of walking.” – New York Times Book Review

About the Author of First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us Human:
Jeremy DeSilva is an anthropologist at Dartmouth College. He is part of the research team that discovered and described two ancient members of the human family tree — Australopithecus sediba and Homo naledi. He has studied wild chimpanzees in Western Uganda and early human fossils in museums throughout Eastern and South Africa. From 1998 to 2003, he worked as an educator at the Boston Museum of Science in Boston, MA. He continues to be passionate about science education and travels throughout New England, giving lectures on human evolution. He and his wife, Erin, live in Norwich, Vermont, with their twins, Ben and Josie.

“Master anatomist and paleontologist Jeremy DeSilva makes no bones about the fact that when looking at fossils ‘I let myself be emotional…’ Thus does this world expert and gifted storyteller take us on a tour through the sprawling, complicated, saga of human origins. Drawing on his personal knowledge of topics ranging from sports medicine to childcare and his acquaintance with a host of colorful characters—whether lying inert in a museum drawer, sitting behind microscopes or feuding with one other — DeSilva adds flesh and projects feelings onto the bones he studies, a tour de force of empathic understanding.” – Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, author of Mother Nature and Mothers and Others: The evolutionary origins of mutual understanding

Book Details:
Title: First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us Human
Author: Jeremy DeSilva
Publisher: ‎ Harper
Published: April 6, 2021
Language: ‎ English
Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
ISBN-10: ‎0062938495
ISBN-13: 978-0062938497
Average Amazon.com review: 4.5/5

“This is breezy popular science at its best, interweaving anecdotes from the field and lab with scientific findings and the occasional pop culture reference. DeSilva gets extra credit for naming oft-overlooked experts who made key discoveries… [DeSIlva] makes a compelling case overall.” — Science News

Harvard Book Store’s virtual event series with Jeremy DeSilva:

“DeSilva has written one of the most interesting “science books” I’ve read in the last five years and one of the most interesting “walking books” over the same span.” — First Things

Related Pages:
The Evolution of the Primate Foot
Prenatal development of the foot and evolution
Relationship of evolutionary development and foot pathology

“It should come as no surprise that walking matters. But what will surprise most readers is how and why. DeSilva takes us on a brilliant, fun, and scientifically deep stroll through history, anatomy, and evolution, in order to illustrate the powerful story of how a particular mode of movement helped make us one of the most wonderful, dangerous and fascinating species on Earth.” — Agustín Fuentes, Professor of Anthropology, Princeton University and author of Why We Believe: Evolution and the Human Way of Being

Page last updated: @ 11:56 pm

 
Comments are closed.