How much time did our ancestors spend up trees? Savanna-living chimpanzees might help us find out

It’s hard to tell when—and why—our ancestors got down from trees and started walking on two legs. Many early hominins capable of bipedal walking were also well-adapted for climbing, and we lack fossil evidence from a key period when climate change turned forests into open, dry woodland called savanna-mosaic, which might have pushed hominins onto the ground.

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