Evolution, How We Live
How grandmothers may have helped our species evolve social skills and longer lives


"According to the hypothesis, grandmothers can help collect food and feed children before they are able to feed themselves, enabling mothers to have more children." Photo by Juan Pablo Serrano Arenas via Pexels


"For years, anthropologists and evolutionary biologists have struggled to explain the existence of menopause, a life stage that humans do not share with our primate relatives. Why would it be beneficial for females to stop being able to have children with decades still left to live?

"According to a study published (this week) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the answer is grandmothers. 'Grandmothering was the initial step toward making us who we are,' says senior author Kristen Hawkes, an anthropologist at the University of Utah. In 1997 Hawkes proposed the 'grandmother hypothesis,' a theory that explains menopause by citing the under-appreciated evolutionary value of grandmothering. Hawkes says that grandmothering helped us to develop 'a whole array of social capacities that are then the foundation for the evolution of other distinctly human traits, including pair bonding, bigger brains, learning new skills and our tendency for cooperation.”' - Joseph Stromberg

Article: New Evidence That Grandmothers Were Crucial for Human Evolution