The fundamental ideas behind it date back to
Lamarck,
Darwin and
Wallace. Also
Gustav Steinmann saw reducing rain forest due to
climate change as an important driver for bipedalism.
Osborn thought man probably originated from the forests and flood-plains of southern Asia.
Hilzheimer stated it was open landscapes that stimulated development. The hypothesis first came to prominence however with the discovery of
Australopithecus africanus by
Raymond Dart in 1924. In an article on the discovery, published in the journal
Nature, Dart wrote:
Weinert stated apes are very reluctant to leave the safety of the trees, and the ancestors of modern man did not leave the trees, but the trees left them.
Grabau echoed this by saying "Instead of the apes leaving the trees, the trees left the apes". Not everyone agreed with this hypothesis, such as
Weidenreich, but he did conclude it was a "widely spread belief". The work of
Robert Ardrey helped popularize the ideas that Dart had developed with a wide audience. In the decades following Dart's discovery, more hominid fossils were found in Eastern and Southern Africa, leading researchers to conclude that these were savanna dwellers as well. Much of the academic discussion at the time took for granted that the transition to the savannas was responsible for the emergence of bipedalism, and focused instead on determining particular mechanisms by which this happened.
Monod investigated the role in human evolution of the Sahara during wet periods as a place that was covered with steppes, savannas, and lakes. He saw advantages for the process of hominization in a wooded savanna. In analogy with
gelada Jolly proposed that "[i]n the basal hominid, therefore, the 'gelada' specialisations would be superimposed upon a behavioural repertoire and post-cranial structure already attuned to some degree of truncal erectness." The transition to bipedality would have been instigated by seed-eating and "probably took place in a
dambo-like environment, later shifting to wider floodplains." An early critic of the savanna hypothesis was
Lovejoy in 1981. He stated "[i]t is more likely that hominids venturing into open habitats were already bipedal and that their regular occupation of savannahs was not possible until intensified social behavior was well developed."
Kortlandt sought the barrier required for
geographic speciation to take place. According to him, the
Great Rift Valley, the
Nile and the
Zambezi acted as a double barrier when a period of
desiccation occurred in East Africa. This "must have converted the last-surviving
dryopithecine (
Proconsul) ape there into an upright-walking, drought-adapted, and 'humanoid' type of bush and grassland ape, i.e., in all probability the Homininae, strictly speaking." This corresponded with the location of some important fossils that had been found until then, such as in 1939 the
Australopithecus afarensis in
Laetoli by
Ludwig Kohl-Larsen and the
Paranthropus boisei in the
Olduvai Gorge in 1959 by
Mary Leakey. This Rift Valley theory became known as the
East Side Story by
Yves Coppens. == Shifting consensus ==