Re: Endurance running nonsense (Re: Faster Than A Hyena?



On Feb 21, 11:38 am, Marc Verhaegen <m_verhae...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

No answer.

FYI on early running:

http://tinyurl.com/32ezcs
"What advantage did it give us during our evolution?
One possibility is that our posture is a reasonable compromise, a way
to derive a relatively efficient terrestrial mode from an ape-like
body. We evolved this way because it allows us to walk long
distances.
Another possibility described in a new paper by Bramble and Lieberman
is that our posture is an adaptation for high-performance endurance
running, and that really we're a species of lopers, joggers, and
marathon runners.
What we have done, though, is pushed that long-range, aerobic gait,
the blue bars, to a greater speed than quadrupeds can match.
These physical adaptations to a walking/running lifestyle came first,
and our big brains may be a consequent side effect."


http://tinyurl.com/2n8y2n

Carl Zimmer Science 2004

"It may come as a surprise to hear that humans excel in running.
Obviously, a leopard can leave us in the dust in a short sprint. But
over longer distances leopards and most other mammals flag. "Most
mammals can't sustain a gallop over 10 to 15 minutes," says Lieberman.
Humans, on the otherhand, can continue running for hours while using
relatively little energy. "Humans are phenomanenal endurance runners,
in terms of speed, cost, and distance," says Lieberman. You can
actually outrun a pony easily." And yet, he points out, "no other
primates ou there endurance run."




http://www.indigenouspeople.net/tarafeat.htm
"The public was amazed at the prowess of the runners and even more so
when the papers reported
that there were better ones at home. One of them was called "The Tiger
of the Sierra"; he had run for
three consecutive days that same year, near Norogachic, Chihuahua,
covering a distance of 300 kilometers,
or 186 miles, of mountainous country."

"Specifically, longer, more linear bodies are better adapted
for heat loss in dry open environments, where evaporative
heat loss from sweating is very effective. All modern-day tall
"elongated"
African (e.g., Nilotics) are restricted to such environments."
Alan Walker and Richard Leakey editors.
1993 The Nariokotome Homo Erectus Skeleton.
Harvard University Press, Cambridge

"Two indepandent lines of research converged on the
conclusion that early Homo was an efficient runner, the first human
species to be so Leakey (1994:55)."


http://www.naturalhistorymag.com/master.html?http://www.naturalhistorymag.com/1206/1206_samplings.html
Mr. Karoha runs down another ill-equipped-for-savanna kudu.

"The earliest Eurasians preferentially occupied
grasslands and open scrub- and wood-lands, as in
East Africa. Homo ergaster/erectus in East Africa after 1.7 Ma is
associated with hot and dry conditions, and open
grasslands; its post-cranial anatomy, with its long
limbs was geared to long-distance walking across
open ground, and to heat dispersal through upright
posture (Dennell 2003:442)."

http://tinyurl.com/7u5wo
" In fact, he walked and ran with better mechanics than we do today.
The mechanics of his femur, femur head, pelvis, and lower back are
superior to those of today. We have had to sacrifice some of that
efficiency of walking and running to give birth to children with
larger brains."


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17584912/
"Just because humans have long legs doesn't make us less aggressive.
Rather, the longer legs are a product of humans' specialization for
distance running."


"He showed that even the slowest human runners could, with even a
slight head start, outrun lions, cheetahs, leopards, hyenas, and wild
dogs, not by speed, but by out distancing them (Donald Mitchell)."
QUARRY CLOSING IN ON THE MISSING LINK by Boaz, Noel T. 1993 (ISBN:
0029045010)

"From our spring-loaded ligaments to our muscular behinds to our
ability to sweat,
the human body took the ideal shape of a long-distance runner starting
some 2 million years ago,
the researchers say. The long, lean build helped us scavenge widely
scattered kills
and could also have been an advantage when hunting down prey over long
distances."
"We're lousy sprinters, but we're really great long-distance
runners,"
said Daniel Lieberman, an anthropologist at Harvard University.


http://tinyurl.com/dcxyw

"A long-distance runner has beaten a leading endurance racehorse over
a distance of 80 kilometres in the United Arab Emirates."



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