Thursday, June 04, 2026

Furgone Conclusion

I was listening to another Sleepy Time History podcast. It kept putting me to sleep, which was, of course, at least part of the intention. It was interesting as most of their podcasts are: How Humans Lost Their Fur. I wanted to know more, and  while I do intend to get back to the 2+ hour podcast, I wanted to know the essentials in summary form, so I hit the internet for just the very basics. This is my summary.

Scientists have deduced that we lost our fur between 1.2 and 2 million years ago. I know that is almost a million year difference between the two dates, but there was no observer available to take notes. From what I can gather, I think the consensus is that 1.2 is the likeliest time frame for the process to have been completed, but it may very well have begun earlier.

They ascertain this by trying to trace the MC1R gene, which is the gene that governs skin pigmentation. No, I don't know how they trace this.

When our ancestors had fur, which they did by the way, their skin underneath the fur would have been light. When they began to lose their fur, it was important that their skin would then become dark as a defense against the strong African sun, under which humanity began.

Under those conditions, dark skin was advantageous to human health and well-being, so natural selection over scads of time favoured darker skinned individuals to be healthier and more successful in life and, therefore, in reproducing.

It happened because of climate change. There was a time way way back when the climate became drier, so the vegetations also changed to more grassland and less tropical forest. When the forests shrank, the ancestors of those who became humans, would have found it advantageous to stand up and walk more. Walking upright is much superior to ambulating on all fours over distances. An upright position would also better allow them to scan for dangerous predators. It became an evolutionary advantage to walk upright, so that is what occurred over thousands of generations  

Our furriness became a hindrance because fur was an insulator in the African heat, humans began to shed their fur. However, with less insulation they also began to require another way to deal with heat. Glands developed to cause early humans to sweat, and the subsequent evaporation helped to dissipate the bodily heat. Concomitantly, humans also developed dark skin to help protect from the harsh rays.

That is how exploring the gene that controls skin colour helped scientists to determine when humans also lost their fur, for the loss of fur and the development of dark skin occurred in connection with each other.

That seems to be the bare bones of the prevailing theory as best as I can understand it.

Almost ironically, about a million years later, when a group of homo sapiens left Africa for Europe, dark skin became a disadvantage in the long winters of the ice age in Europe. People no longer required protection from the harsh African sun but rather needed to absorb all of the vitamin D  that they could from the weaker northern sun. Light skin then became an evolutionary advantage that natural selection favoured in more northerly regions.


19 comments:

  1. This falls into the category of info I will probably never use but find fascinating and it's nice to know!

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  2. I knew about the skin pigmentation but not the part about the fur or what spurred upright mobility. Interesting stuff.

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  3. I teach about those items every A&P class I have every semester. The range of different levels of pigmentation seen by people across the world reflects the evolution of skin tones of the dual competition for protection from UV damage versus the need for SOME UV entrance to the skin tones stimulate vitamin D production. There are at least six different genes that determine a person’s skin tone….. hence the range of levels of pigmentation we see.

    In the modern world with such easy access to Vitamon D, it would be far, far better in the modern world if we were to all be deeply pigmented.

    In terms of hair/fur…… we actually still HAVE a full body covering of hair/fur. It is just that in many areas of our body it has regressed into what is called vellum (rudimentary) hair. This is true on the scalp of people with male pattern baldness too. And elephants also display lots of vellum hair.

    PipeTobacco

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    1. Thanks for weighing in with your expertise. Much appreciated.

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    2. Also regarding hair/fur….. it would be better for UV protection if we did not have vellum hair…… my beard and mustache help protect my face from a lot of UV (I wear sunscreen elsewhere on my face). 🧔‍♂️

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  4. “tones” in the above should be “to”

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  5. I liked your history lesson this morning, very interesting!

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  6. Podcasts are so informative. Like you, I have to replay the parts where I fell asleep!

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  7. I wonder how furry Mediterranean men fit into these theories. It sounds quite fascinating to think about all of these theories.

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  8. Fascinating info, as well as what PT added.

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  9. Interesting. And in modern man, some ethnicities are hairier than others-- heavy beards to no beards, etc.

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  10. Fascinating, dear friend. Thank you so much for sharing this!

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  11. Musings: I sort of knew some of this, but I found the whole scope of what you wrote very interesting. Thank you for the time you took to organize this.

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  12. What a fascinating post, really enjoyed it. Thank you so much!

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  13. This is very interesting. I actually have never thought of this before. Thanks and have a great day.

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  14. Information everyone should know.

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  15. That's interesting. I'm glad I'm not furry. lol

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  16. Both your notes and Pipe Tobacco's additions are fascinating. The things we don't know about ourselves!

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  17. Oh, this is absolutely fascinating! I love that a podcast specifically designed to put you to sleep ended up sparking your curiosity so much that you had to go on a deep-dive internet mission. That is the sign of a true lifelong learner right there! Your summary is brilliant and so easy to understand. It completely blows my mind to think about how intricately our skin, sweat glands, and lack of fur are all tied to the simple act of standing up on two feet and walking out of the forest. Evolution truly is a master engineer.

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