I suppose crustaceans are another such animal that relies on the body of another living species to survive as hermit crab. But humans are the only mammal that needs to weave the vine; shear the fur; or scalp the leather from another living thing in order to survive in the wilderness.
Why is that? How did humans manage to be the only species that requires clothing to survive and needs to rely on other animals to provide material to produce clothing.
Obviously I know that synthetic fibers exist *now,* but for most of human history, we relied on animal products to clothe ourselves for as long as humans existed.
Why do hominids need clothes to live? Where is our fur? Alternatively, where are all the other animals that need to rely on clothing to supplement a protective outer layer?
In: Biology
In equatorial areas where we started, humans *don’t* need clothes. We were smart enough to make clothes, allowing us to move into new habitats, so we did because we could. The natives in Africa still don’t wear clothes.
So it’s not that humans are less equipped than other animals, we’re MORE equipped (with a big smart brain and dextrous tool-using hands), and so we’ve been able to inhabit a WAY bigger range of different conditions than other animals.
Think about those other animals. Can a lion or a deer live in the Gobi desert and the Amazon rainforest and Siberia? Humans can.
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