China Daily

Future humans: Big eyes, short legs

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SYDNEY — To imagine what humans will look like in the future, people must first understand what different hominid species looked like in the past, said a senior lecturer at the department of environmen­tal sciences of Macquarie University in Australia.

“The whole idea is to just get people involved in science,” Kira Westaway said at the Sydney Science Week, which will explore the mysteries of evolution.

As part of the program, 75 children between the ages 5-10 will be given the task of designing their own future human race.

“It’s really interestin­g for kids, so they can get a sense of who they are and where they belong and how they have become to look they way they are,” Westaway said.

“We are looking at environmen­tal challenges, what the environmen­t is going to look like in the future.”

According to Westaway, it’s very feasible to think that future humans will have shorter legs due to our modern propensity to sit for long periods.

It could also be likely that people will have much larger eyes in the years to come, as higher levels of dust and pollution in the air may act to dim the sunlight.

Some even point to the possibilit­y of evolving with gills and webbed feet if the sea levels continue to rise, while others imagine the emergence of human-cyborgs.

“It’s great for kids to understand that connection between the environmen­t and how important the environmen­t is for us and how that will actually affect us in the future,” Westaway said.

Recently returned from China, Westaway has been applying her talents at the Beijing-based Institute of Vertebrate Paleontolo­gy and Paleoanthr­opology with the Chinese Academy of Science, with a team of researcher­s who are experts in a giant ape called gigantopit­hecus blacki, or “giganto” for short.

Westaway and fellow researcher­s believe evidence of the mysterious creature may lie in the caves along the Huaihe River near Nanjing in Jiangsu province.

“Once we find those caves, we can work out exactly when they disappeare­d or dropped out of the fossil record, then we can work out the environmen­t and the climate and what things were doing at that time that may have caused their extinction,” Westaway said.

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