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Assuming there were no extinction level threats to the dinosaurs, and they never fully died off (and survived the following ice ages), how would this affect the evolution and technology use of humans if at all?

Given that a T-rex is about the same size and speed as an elephant, and velociraptors are slightly faster than wolves and slower than lions, I presume that we would just handle these dangerous creatures much the same as we handle similar and the major difference would be in fauna and flora.

My question is not how would we survive with them as Could humans survive with dinosaurs? answers, but specifically how them surviving would affect our evolution and technology development.

The linked question specifically states "Okay, quite a few people have asked what technological level the humans are at. Well these humans were on a generation ship before so I would assume space age level." Where i am asking if humans could develop and if so how would their tech change if at all to deal with these creatures.

Very specifically, the other question asks if a pre-existing human civilization could survive if introduced in an environment where Dinosaurs still roamed the Earth. This question is asking if humans could still EVOLVE on such a planet, and if so, what major biological and psychological differences might there be on such a planet.

Jax
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Erudaki
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    I specifically asked about how it would alter human evolution and technology development if dinosaurs survived, not how we coexist with them. That question assumes humans at a certain tech level already and it does not answer my question at all. – Erudaki Jul 09 '18 at 19:31
  • Hello, Erudaki, and welcome to Worldbuilding. Please take our [tour] and visit the [help] to learn more about the site. Have a nice day! – Gryphon Jul 09 '18 at 19:41
  • Even if we make the very optimistic assumption that humans would appear at all if 65 million years of evolution had such a drastic change, asking how all of human development would be affected if the world's ecosystem was completely different seems very broad. You may want to narrow the question down a bit, such as describing how the world looks during a specific time in human history, in order to get more meaningful answers. – Giter Jul 09 '18 at 20:02
  • But that is exactly my question. "Humans would not have survived because x" is a fine answer. I fail to see how that is too broad when other questions ask how some culture's tech would have progressed if x situation such as - this one about underwater technological development Do you have any suggestions to help me improve my question? – Erudaki Jul 09 '18 at 20:15
  • You linked the wrong question. You linked mine. – Erudaki Jul 09 '18 at 20:41
  • A reminder that old questions are not good examples for what is on or off topic currently. The site scope has changed massively over the course of the last 3 years and 9 months (the age of your linked example). If that question were asked today, it would most certainly be closed as too broad. – Aify Jul 09 '18 at 21:31
  • if thats the case why is my question marked as duplicate, and not too broad? It most definitely is not a duplicate of the linked question. it specifically states "Okay, quite a few people have asked what technological level the humans are at. Well these humans were on a generation ship before so I would assume space age level." Where i am asking if humans could develop and if so how would their tech change if at all to deal with these creatures. – Erudaki Jul 09 '18 at 21:35
  • "if humans could develop and if so how would their tech change" is too broad. The question being closed as a duplicate is a mistake likely due to the majority voting system; IIRC, if 3 out of the 5 votes are duplicate votes, then it marks it as duplicate. It takes whatever reason was most commonly used for the banner. – Aify Jul 09 '18 at 21:39
  • @Erudaki The way the vote-to-close system works on stack exchange is that users specify a reason when they vote to close. Even if those reasons disagree on why the question should be closed, if 5 users vote for closure the question is closed and the majority reason is selected. 2 or 3 voted your question as a duplicate of that other one, while 2 or 3 other users voted your question as too-broad or off-topic. Obviously, your question is a not a duplicate of that other question, but it may be difficult to reverse that decision and reopen your question because it is still deemed overly broad. – Mike Nichols Jul 09 '18 at 21:43
  • Then how can I narrow it down? Would keeping it limited to early technology help? – Erudaki Jul 09 '18 at 21:44
  • I don't think this question is fixable, as almost any rendition of the question I could think of would be result in entire stories being written. On the other hand, if you decide to first say "this happened, this is how our stuff changed", and asked if it was reasonable (asking properly, within constraints of the site), it might be narrow enough. – Aify Jul 09 '18 at 21:54
  • @Erudaki I'm not sure how you might narrow the question, because the question is quite broad by nature. You are asking for an answer to explore an alternate evolutionary tree starting over 60 million years ago. Even assuming primates evolved and then apes what predators or competition would have evolved alongside them? Does T. rex even still exist after 60 million years? Have other predators evolved like predatory cats? It's a colossal question to ask what early pressures early hominids would face differently when we barely understand what drove the evolution of humans as it is. – Mike Nichols Jul 09 '18 at 21:54
  • whatif I worded my question to presume humans do evolve, and kept the how their tech would have to develop to account for these creatures? – Erudaki Jul 09 '18 at 22:06
  • @Erudaki That could work. It's actually fairly close a recent question of mine, although not necessarily a duplicate. If you would like to have a conversation about your question you could come to the chat where your question was being discussed. Additionally you could use the sandbox to get better feedback. – Mike Nichols Jul 09 '18 at 22:15
  • @Erudaki Lastly, it will be an uphill battle to get this questioned reopened. You will most likely have better luck asking a new question rather than heavily editing this one. The questions will likely be different enough that this would be warranted anyways. – Mike Nichols Jul 09 '18 at 22:16
  • I'm going to vote to leave this open, but Erudaki, I need you to do me a favor. It's a tall order for us to prognosticate what humans would have done so long ago if dinos hadn't died, but it's not impossible. However, SE is a Q&A site, not a discussion site. To keep the question open, you need to explain how you will judge the best answer (clearly and specifically). It's the only way to give us guidelines that don't result in a bunch of guesses and opinions. – JBH Jul 16 '18 at 03:56
  • You need to be a lot more specific. The KT extinction event affected a lot more than killing off most dinosaurs. ("they never fully died off" isn't a hypothetical, it's what really happened as birds are still with us today) So, are you supposing that the KT Extinction never happened or that it did but more types of dinosaur survived? You also mention a species (Tyrannosaurus rex) and a genus (Velociraptor) as if they would be unchanged over the 65 Ma of the Cenozoic when Velociraptors were already extinct 20 Ma before the KT extinction. – smithkm Aug 11 '19 at 02:32

5 Answers5

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It is highly unlikely that anything just like us would have evolved had the dinosaurs not gone extinct.

Evolution is essentially chaotic (in the technical sense) and is driven by accidental mutation and accidental matings (both driving randomness) and natural selection weakly selecting each of the new genomes created by random mutations and random egg-meets-sperm events. This goes on over millions of generations.

Natural selection will still result in highly adapted organisms and may well produce intelligence, but it would be very unlikely to look much like us and certainly would not be human in the biological sense of being interfertile.

Would intelligence in any form evolve on a dinosaur-dominated planet? Hard to say because we don't really understand how intelligence evolves or how likely it is to evolve. The evidence is that in our sample of one, it has evolved once in the last hundred million years. This allows us to make a (weak) estimate of intelligence taking on average 100,000,000 years to evolve with huge uncertainty. (Not a good estimate, but it's an estimate based on actual evidence rather than speculation.)

On the more speculative side, we think that social animals are more likely to evolve intelligence. (Basically, that we evolved intelligence because we lived in troops which started out looking a lot like modern baboon troops, with intense social interaction. We evolved intelligence because it allowed us to lie better and to gain higher social position in the troop.

So look for whatever ultimately evolves to come from a social animal.

Mark Olson
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    one could argue it evolved twice, depending on how you view ant societies. They farm (both plants and livestock), recycle, maintain hygiene by harvesting tree sap, build cities with ventilation, learn and react to changes in their ecosystem, war with other colonies and take slaves, and have been observed to teach other ants in their colony how to find certain paths. (and a bonus, they have existed a long time)

    But i do think your answer makes a large amount of sense. We probably wouldnt be us if at all.

    – Erudaki Jul 10 '18 at 20:11
  • @Erudaki: Social animals have evolved many, many times, (dogs, meerkats, ants, bees, lions, prairie dogs, termites, etc.) but -- as far as we know -- intelligence only once. Ant behavior seems to be entirely instinctive. – Mark Olson Jul 10 '18 at 20:20
  • Newer research shows otherwise and its a debate among researchers in that area. But several studies have shown that some behaviors are non instinctive. Its not human intelligence for sure. But i wouldnt be so quick to dismiss it as non-intelligence. They do everything we did in our infancy, id just argue they arnt suited to develop anything past where they are at, due to lack of ability to manipulate tools, or have fine dexterity, as well as being such a size would prevent the use of fire. And fire is an important step in developing technologically past a certain point. – Erudaki Jul 10 '18 at 20:36
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The un-fun route is to theorize that larger, intelligent mammals would never have had the chance to develop b/c the dinosaurs would have filled every ecological niche.

Alternately, the dominant, human-intelligence life would be reptilian, like the Sleestack. This could be an entertaining avenue, having fun with presumed differences between humans and humanoid reptilians.

Alternately, mammals and monkeys do evolve, but must be absolute ninjas to survive among the ferocious dinos. The baseline human in this scenario would have to be a full-on Strider level Ranger: able to move silently, hide impeccably, stay upwind of threats, and be stronger, faster and more agile than we contemporary humans.

These humans might evolve to be small like Homo floresiensis, to escape the notice of the larger dinosaurs, or, they could evolve from the largest apes, like Gigantopithecus or even larger.

You'd likely still need some environmental disaster to open up ecological niches for the alt-human evolution, but the disaster could be smaller scale, perhaps restricted to a single continent like Australia.

You could also look to a model where Yeti evolve first, since high alpine regions would be inhospitable to many dinosaurs, and humans evolve subsequently from Yeti, losing their hair over millions of years.

DukeZhou
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  • This is basically what I suggested in my answer. I do like what you say, but is there anything different you would like to include? – DarkCygnus Jul 09 '18 at 20:28
  • @DarkCygnus I'd think my dismissal of the unfun scenario and explication of the third scenario (if mammalian humans did evolve) qualifies as different. – DukeZhou Jul 09 '18 at 20:33
  • From what ive researched small shrew sized primates and other smaller mammals co-existed with them, but had smaller populations due to most ecological niche being filled. so they would be harder to see and be much more agile than a giant dino. (and much less a worthwhile meal) – Erudaki Jul 10 '18 at 14:20
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There were several extinction events that could have set the dinosaurs back without killing them off, allowing mammals to have an easier time flourishing for a while. You could have the dinosaurs make a comeback later without wiping out the primates.

Humans would likely be faster, perhaps able to still run on all fours to run away from giant predatory dinosaurs or even angry plant eaters. This also means they might have less endurance and would maybe have to eat more plant foods since our endurance irl is unique in the animal kingdom bc we're equipped to run animals to exhaustion. BUT this also means we would have GIANT bellies, which would be required to extract the same amount of nutrition from plant foods as we currently do from meat. This would also lead to humans being less intelligent since the calories required back in the day to support a huge brain would not have been available in plant form.

There is one way to get around this - you could also play around with plant evolution, giving humans a calorie dense food source that could replace meat calories, like a tuber perhaps. Only thing is you would have to work out how the humans evolved to out-compete other animals for the same calorie dense food source. Think BEARS. You could also play around with the enzymes humans evolved with, so we could extract calories from things like plant fiber without having to ferment it like a gorilla with a big pot belly. Think termites.

Alternatively, going with the running-on-all-fours idea, humans could have developed a more stealth focused hunting strategy, sneaking up on and then running down prey animals, kinda like big cats. Humans would have to be bigger, or at least more muscular and more compact with larger lungs.

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Assuming there were no extinction level threats to the dinosaurs, and they never fully died off (and survived the following ice ages), how would this affect the evolution and technology use of humans if at all?

If dinosaurs never went extinct, and somehow survived the following ice ages up to the current era, chances are dinosaurs would have evolved to be the dominant species on Earth.

Most likely, if their evolution was not halted, they will eventually become Sentient, or develop higher mental functions like language, maths, arts, etc.. They might also develop a proto-society, which may eventually evolve to villages, cities, metropolis, etc..

As they continue evolving their mental faculties they will become some sort of Reptilian Race, now capable of things similar or more advanced to the ones us Humans are able to do now. It's also likely that they will start draining resources from Earth in a faster manner, and as a side effect prevent other species, like mammals and primates, from evolving into Sentient/Intelligent dominant species.

In short, I'd say that the dominant species on earth would have been this Reptilian derivative, and not us, some Primate derivative.

DarkCygnus
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  • Dinosaurs were living on earth for over 150 million years, where as humans were only around for several hundred thousand. How much longer would it take for them to develop sentience if they hadn't already? – Erudaki Jul 09 '18 at 20:20
  • Hehe, that means that Reptilians do exists and have been among us since then. Jokes aside, have in mind that the Earth was still "younger" and more unstable (much climate change, volcanic and seismic activity, etc.), so it was harder for species back then to survive, let develop sentience or intelligence... us Humans were lucky to appear on the Era we did, which is more stable and benign for species on their way to become sentient/intelligent :) – DarkCygnus Jul 09 '18 at 20:25
  • I personally don't think reptiles will develop higher mental functions in the same way humans do because it goes against the idea of being cold blooded. It would be an unnecessary energy drain for an animal to have a higher intelligence which would be better invested into strength, size or speed. – Shadowzee Jul 10 '18 at 05:58
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Assuming that the dinosaurs survived, and somehow humans also evolved to what be what they are now, so dinosaurs exist alongside humans, humans would have hunted most of them to extinction, or at least submission.

Humans don't do well at tolerating animals that threaten humans. Most dinosaurs that live in areas that humans want to live would be killed, domesticated, or driven off.

There would still be dinosaurs in places that humans don't really want to live, such as jungles, savanas, wilderness, etc. which are the same places that the big predators live now.
Things like lions, tigers, and bears live in these places mostly by leaving humans alone. Humans still go into those places to hunt the animals though, so they wouldn't be completely safe.

AndyD273
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  • any idea on if how our early technology would have to differ to be able to handle these? Obviously civilization in Africa didnt have to worry about their elephants trying to eat and murder them completely. Some prehistoric tribes were suspected to have killed mammoths by throwing things off cliffs, but obviously this wouldnt work everywhere, and a more general solution would need to be able to deal with them. – Erudaki Jul 10 '18 at 20:04
  • @Erudaki Lots of men with lots of spears I suspect. Surround a mammoth so that no matter what way it turns someone can stab it in the back, or throw the spear into a vulnerable place. The nice thing about predators is that there aren't a lot of them in a given area generally. You need a lot of food to feed something like a t-rex, meaning that you need a lot of prey and a lot of space to roam. So there might only be a few big ones in a few days walk. So spears, dropping things, lure them into quicksand... – AndyD273 Jul 10 '18 at 20:50
  • And they would have tried to domesticate what they could. A bunch of triceratops with riders backed by spear chuckers, driving their prey into a place that it has a footing disadvantage. Smash/rob nests to keep new ones from hatching. Eventually the bow gets invented. People would have figured out what worked and what didn't and adapted things to give themselves better odds. – AndyD273 Jul 10 '18 at 20:54
  • How feasible would it be to "trip" a T-rex? i imagine their pretty top heavy, tall, and only have 2 feet to balance on so a forward facing fall would be pretty harmful if not lethal to it. Perhaps some form of primitive cable or rope would also develop? – Erudaki Jul 10 '18 at 21:15