Orlando Sentinel

Earth’s giants were 1 step for small man

- By Jason Bittel

Life on Earth used to look a lot more impressive. Just a little more than 100,000 years ago, there were sloths as long as a giraffe is tall, monstrous bears whose shoulders were six feet off the ground, and Bunyanesqu­e beavers that weighed as much as an NFL linebacker. But over time, all of these creatures disappeare­d in a manner so rapid and so mysterious that scientists still can’t fully explain what went down.

Did an asteroid discharge the mega-beasts, similar to the one thought to have snuffed out the dinosaurs? Or was it widespread climactic change or a plague of new diseases? Did our penchant for hunting play a role?

It’s likely some combinatio­n of factors led to a planet-wide demise in sizable mammals as the Ice Age came to a close. But a study published last week in the journal Science provides evidence that the major drivers were humans and other hominids.

“We ... asked the question, ‘Is it ever bad to be big?’ ” said lead author Felisa Smith, a paleoecolo­gist at the University of New Mexico. “For 65 million years, it didn’t matter what size you were.”

That is, until a new kind of predator arrived on the scene: Homo erectus. Around 1.8 million years ago, hominids that had long been dependent on plants became hominids that were “heavily and increasing­ly dependent on meat as a food source,” Smith said.

“You hunt a rabbit, you have food for a small family for a day,” Smith said. “You hunt a mammoth, you feed the village.”

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