pimg class=”alignright” src=”http://i247.photobucket.com/albums/gg158/MDA2008/MDA%202012/walk.jpg” alt=”walk” width=”320″ height=”212″ title=”Walking: The Human Condition” /When early humans stood erect over the African savannah, our improved vantage point gave more than views of prey and predator, berry bush and honeybee hive, nut tree and watering hole; we saw possibilities. We saw the horizon stretching out until what appeared to be infinity. We saw sunsets and sunrises, mountains and valleys, stars and constellations and galaxies. The world grew. And we viewed this massive world with a childlike curiosity that made emjust looking/em insufficient. We had to touch, visit, and experience it./p
pSo we a title=”7 Powerful Ways to Make Walking More Exciting” href=”http://www.marksdailyapple.com/7-powerful-ways-to-make-walking-more-exciting/”walked/a./p
pspan id=”more-51904″/span/p
pSome of us walked north from our East African homelands a title=”The Levant versus the Horn of Africa: Evidence for Bidirectional Corridors of Human Migrations” href=”http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1182266/” target=”_blank”across the Levantine corridor/a to reach the Near East (or what became the Fertile Crescent before agriculture stripped it bare). From there, humans walked […]
Original post by Mark Sisson
Filed under: Fitness