Technology

'They could spend 4 or 5 hours per day underwater': How humans adapted to the most challenging environments

April 06, 2026 5 min read views
'They could spend 4 or 5 hours per day underwater': How humans adapted to the most challenging environments
  1. Archaeology
  2. Human Evolution
'They could spend 4 or 5 hours per day underwater': How humans adapted to the most challenging environments MEMBER EXCLUSIVE

Features By Herman Pontzer published 6 April 2026

In the book "Adaptable," evolutionary anthropologist Herman Pontzer explores human biology and development, and how people have evolved to survive everywhere on Earth.

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Man and yak walking in Himalayas People living at high altitudes, like in the Himalayas, have developed traits to help them survive in low-oxygen environments. (Image credit: Whitworth Images via Getty Images)
  • Copy link
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
  • Email
Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Live Science Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter now

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Become a Member in Seconds

Unlock instant access to exclusive member features.

Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

You are now subscribed

Your newsletter sign-up was successful

Want to add more newsletters?

Daily Newsletter

Delivered Daily

Daily Newsletter

Sign up for the latest discoveries, groundbreaking research and fascinating breakthroughs that impact you and the wider world direct to your inbox.

Signup + Life's Little Mysteries

Once a week

Life's Little Mysteries

Feed your curiosity with an exclusive mystery every week, solved with science and delivered direct to your inbox before it's seen anywhere else.

Signup + How It Works

Once a week

How It Works

Sign up to our free science & technology newsletter for your weekly fix of fascinating articles, quick quizzes, amazing images, and more

Signup + Space.com Newsletter

Delivered daily

Space.com Newsletter

Breaking space news, the latest updates on rocket launches, skywatching events and more!

Signup + Watch This Space

Once a month

Watch This Space

Sign up to our monthly entertainment newsletter to keep up with all our coverage of the latest sci-fi and space movies, tv shows, games and books.

Signup + Night Sky This Week

Once a week

Night Sky This Week

Discover this week's must-see night sky events, moon phases, and stunning astrophotos. Sign up for our skywatching newsletter and explore the universe with us!

Signup +

Join the club

Get full access to premium articles, exclusive features and a growing list of member rewards.

Explore An account already exists for this email address, please log in. Subscribe to our newsletter

Our species, Homo sapiens, is the most geographically diverse of all primate species, permanently living on every continent except Antarctica. We have achieved this through our unprecedented ability to develop adaptations that increase the odds of surviving and producing in different environments.

Highly localized adaptations, like those that enable people to survive at high altitude, arise when there's a sustained environmental pressure driving the need to produce new biological solutions, Herman Pontzer, a professor of evolutionary anthropology and global health at Duke University, previously told Live Science.

You may like
  • Hadza man making an arrow 'That's why there's 9 billion of us and not 9 billion of some other primate': Why our ability to adapt is humanity's 'superpower'
  • A collage with an illustration of DNA DNA shed by every living thing is lurking in the environment — and it could tell us how Earth is changing in real time
  • illustration of the appendix, depicted in pink, extending off of the colon, depicted in blue The appendix evolved at least 32 times across 361 species, so it's 'unlikely to be a useless evolutionary accident,' research finds

The sophistication and control of the heart and lungs can make the system seem like a jewel of evolutionary perfection. But evolution is a tinkerer, a junkyard mechanic solving problems with the materials at hand. Trade-offs and limitations are inevitable. Just ask Jimi Hendrix.

Hendrix was a guitarist of otherworldly talent who revolutionized rock music in the 1960s. He was also an avid participant in the recreational chemistry of the era, indulging heavily in a range of legal and illicit pharmaceuticals. On September 18, 1970, in a hotel in London, after taking roughly eighteen times the recommended dose of sleeping pills after an evening of drinking, Hendrix died. But while the drugs were certainly responsible for his death, it wasn’t the chemicals per se that killed him. Instead, having passed out and vomited from the massive overdose, Hendrix fell victim to a much more common killer. He choked.

Humans are uniquely vulnerable to choking. More than five thousand die that way each year in the U.S. alone. Other species don't have this problem, which is fundamentally a plumbing issue. Your larynx (also called a voice box) is the doorway to your lungs. It's a stiff cartilage cylinder that can be closed off at the top by two fleshy lips called vocal folds and a flapping lid called an epiglottis. The human larynx sits in a precarious position, low in the throat, practically begging to be clogged with every bite of food or gulp of water. Why would evolution favor such a dangerous position for the larynx, threatening our breathing and access to oxygen, when every other animal (including our ape relatives) has theirs sensibly tucked up high and out of the way, behind their nose?

It turns out the dumb position of our larynx is the result of evolutionary tinkering to our breathing system to produce language. The sound of your voice is produced by squeezing air through your larynx with the vocal folds pushed together. This is similar to the way a trumpet player makes a ptbtptpbptptp! noise by pushing air through their pursed lips (what I'd call a raspberry and my children insist is a fart sound). The puff puff puff of air that escapes becomes pressure waves that travel through the air, which our ears register as sound. Higher or lower notes are achieved by pulling the vocal folds tighter or relaxing them. (Testosterone thickens the vocal folds, which is why men tend to have lower voices.)

Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter nowContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

You form that sound into vowels by manipulating the shapes of your mouth and throat, and cut it into consonants with your teeth, tongue, and lips. The low position of the larynx makes this possible. If it's higher up, at the same level with the nostrils as we see in other apes, you could make noise, but the ability to shape that sound into words would be severely limited. That's why it's nearly impossible to get a dog, chimpanzee, or other mammal to form speech-like words. They can still communicate, of course, with a bark or a grunt, but the rich sonic landscape of human language is out of reach.

Our ancestors were so social, so cooperative, that the evolutionary benefits of better communication outweighed the increased risk of choking to death. Choking is the price we pay for the ability to speak.

Infant chimpanzee with right hand raised

Chimpanzees communicate with one another through gestures and vocalizations with clear meanings, but language remains unique to humans. (Image credit: Manoj Shah via Getty Images)

Other adaptations to our breathing and circulatory systems come at a cost as well. When we travel into the mountains, we're faced with the challenge of extracting enough oxygen from the high-altitude air. The evolved solution is to produce more red blood cells. When the liver and kidneys sense low oxygen concentrations in the blood, they produce the hormone EPO [erythropoietin], which stimulates the bone marrow to crank out more red blood cells. (That's why some endurance athletes cheat with EPO injections — it gives them extra red blood cells and oxygen-carrying capacity.) It's a good solution, but it increases the ratio of cells to water in the blood, making it slightly thicker. That, in turn, can cause altitude sickness, which typically involves headaches and nausea, but can progress to dangerous and even fatal fluid buildup in the lungs and brain.

What to read next
  • A reconstruction of a late Neanderthal from El Salt. Did modern humans wipe out the Neanderthals? New evidence may finally provide answers.
  • Man holding a honeyguide bird in nature reserve 'It's nature calling to humans, and humans deciding whether or not to reply': Why we need to start paying attention to our mutually beneficial relationships with other species
  • Reconstruction of Lucy hominin species Human origins quiz: How well do you know the story of humanity?

Native populations in the Andes, the highest mountain range in South America, live with elevated red blood cell counts their entire lives. They have larger lungs and rib cages as well, through what appears to be a combination of genetic adaptations for increased air exchange and the environmental pressures of growing up at high altitude. But while a number of genetic adaptations to altitude have been identified in Andean groups, they still struggle with altitude sickness. Approximately 15 percent of adults experience chronic mountain sickness. The physiological solution to low oxygen levels carries a steep price for many.

Intriguingly, altitude sickness isn't as much of an issue for native high-altitude communities in the Himalayan Mountains of Asia. Himalayan and Andean populations are descended from different lowland groups thousands of miles and thousands of years apart. Their movements into the mountains were completely independent, and the adaptations they evolved solved the same set of challenges, but in different ways.

Most of these fragments don't have any impact on how our bodies function — they're just mementos from our ancestor's wild affairs, like misspelled tattoos from some Paleolithic spring break

Himalayan populations carry a particular allele [version] of a gene called EPAS1 that's involved in the production of red blood cells. This Himalayan allele has the effect of keeping EPO levels and red blood cell numbers low, allowing people to live with the chronic stresses of altitude without developing mountain sickness. This solution comes with its own downsides, as it also means their ability to carry oxygen is limited, but other adaptations in their vessels and breathing rate maintain oxygen delivery throughout the body.

Even more remarkable than the Himalayan EPAS1 allele is the story of how they got it. As our ancestors spread out across Africa and then Eurasia over the past two hundred thousand years or so, they encountered other closely related humanlike species, like Neanderthals in the Near East and Europe. And, like humans everywhere throughout history, some of our ancestors weren't particularly picky, and slept with them.

Our species were so genetically similar that these couplings produced fertile children, hybrids of our species and others. (Some would argue that we should consider Neanderthals and other groups human because of this ability to interbreed — a semantic argument that's fun to have over drinks with an anthropologist.) We can find the genetic evidence of these affairs scattered around our genome today, fragments of DNA from other species that allow retail genetics companies to calculate how much Neanderthal DNA you carry, for example. I'm a bit less than 2 percent Neanderthal, genomically speaking.

Most of these fragments don't have any impact on how our bodies function — they're just mementos from our ancestor's wild affairs, like misspelled tattoos from some Paleolithic spring break, and a reminder that humans will sleep with just about anything. Using the distinction we discussed in the last chapter, these alleles would be considered neutral.

The Himalayan EPAS1 allele is a clear exception. That allele appears to have entered the human gene pool through a Paleolithic tryst with a group called the Denisovans, somewhere in Asia, roughly fifty thousand years ago. For tens of thousands of years it was just there in the mix, a neutral allele that had no strong effect on survival or reproduction. But around nine thousand years ago, as some of those populations started pushing farther and farther up into the mountains, that allele proved to be advantageous. Those with the Denisovan variant for EPAS1 were free from altitude sickness, and better able to thrive and raise families in the high mountains. It went from neutral to local and became the predominant allele in Himalayan populations, the adaptive EPAS1 allele we see in virtually everyone native to the Himalayas today.

Another remarkable case of local cardiovascular adaptation was discovered just recently, in a population known as the Sama (also called the Bajau). The Sama live on houseboats in the ocean around the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia, spending nearly all of their lives at sea. Theirs is a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, but in the ocean: they spearfish and collect food in the depths, sometimes more than two hundred feet below the surface, swimming or using weights to hold themselves down as they walk the seafloor. Like many Indigenous groups, their lifestyle is rapidly changing, but traditionally they could spend four or five hours per day underwater, foraging. It's a lifestyle they appear to have maintained for thousands of years.

RELATED STORIES

—Gene mutation helps Andean highlanders thrive at altitude, and 'living fossil' fish live deep underwater

—'Speech gene' seen only in modern humans may have helped us evolve to talk

—Natural selection is unfolding right now in these remote villages in Nepal

Life spent partially underwater poses similar oxygen-delivery challenges as life in the mountains. One evolutionarily ancient response to diving, common among mammals, is to contract the spleen, an organ the shape of a child's slipper tucked up high in the left side of your abdomen, beside your stomach. The spleen is a monitoring station for the immune system, a spongelike organ that checks the blood for bacteria and other nasties. Since it's normally full of blood, it's essentially a reserve tank of red blood cells. When you dive into cold water, the spleen contracts, ejecting its payload of red blood cells to help oxygenate the rest of your body. If you train breath-holding, your spleen will grow to do this job more effectively. High-mountain groups, like those in the Himalayas, have larger spleens than lowlanders, apparently from a combination of genetic adaptation and a life spent at altitude.

Natural selection has favored an allele of the PDE10A gene that increases spleen size in the Sama, with nearly double the average volume for those carrying two copies of the allele compared to those with none. Other diving-response genes appear to be under selection in this population as well. Environment still matters — all that breath-holding also helps them increase the size of their spleens. But it's a clear case of genetic adaptation, with natural selection responding to a consistent, strong, and localized challenge in the Sama population.

Excerpted from Adaptable: How Your Unique Body Really Works and Why Our Biology Unites Us (Penguin Random House, 2025)

Cover of book "Adaptable" by Herman Pontzer

Adaptable $32 at penguinrandomhouse.com

"Adaptable" was a finalist for the 2026 PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award.

TOPICS books Herman PontzerHerman PontzerProfessor of evolutionary anthropology and global health at Duke University

Herman Pontzer is a professor of evolutionary anthropology and global health at Duke University. He is an internationally recognized researcher in human energetics and evolution. Over two decades of research in the field and laboratory, Dr. Pontzer has conducted pathbreaking studies across a range of settings, including fieldwork with Hadza hunter-gatherers in northern Tanzania, fieldwork on chimpanzee ecology in the rainforests of Uganda, and metabolic measurements of great apes in zoos and sanctuaries around the globe. Dr. Pontzer’s work has been covered in The New York Times, the BBC, PBS, The Washington Post, The Atlantic, NPR, Scientific American, and others. He is the author of BURN (Avery, 2021).

View More

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

Logout Read more A collage with an illustration of DNA Planet Earth DNA shed by every living thing is lurking in the environment — and it could tell us how Earth is changing in real time    illustration of the appendix, depicted in pink, extending off of the colon, depicted in blue Health The appendix evolved at least 32 times across 361 species, so it's 'unlikely to be a useless evolutionary accident,' research finds    A reconstruction of a late Neanderthal from El Salt. Archaeology Did modern humans wipe out the Neanderthals? New evidence may finally provide answers.    Man holding a honeyguide bird in nature reserve Animals 'It's nature calling to humans, and humans deciding whether or not to reply': Why we need to start paying attention to our mutually beneficial relationships with other species    a light-skinned woman with red hair looks at a bust ofa. Neanderthal man in a museum Neanderthals Humans and Neanderthals interbred — but it was mostly male Neanderthals and female humans who coupled up, study finds    Reconstruction of Lucy hominin species Human Evolution Human origins quiz: How well do you know the story of humanity?    Latest in Human Evolution A view looking from inside a dark cave through an opening where a lush green jungle lies beyond. Neanderthals 'Major disruption in Neanderthal history': 65,000 years ago, all Neanderthals in Europe died out except for one lineage    A close up of a small, cylindrical, yellowish bone with a hollow middle sitting on a shiny surface with a centimeter ruler next to it. Neanderthals 2 Neanderthals present at same Siberian cave 10,000 years apart were distant relatives, 110,000-year-old bone reveals    An illustration showing a large ape-like creature with brown fur sitting in front of a lush jungle Human Evolution 18 million-year-old fossils of ape found in Africa, but in an unexpected place    An image of the bottom half of a man's face, showing a dark moustache over a white-toothed smile. The man has an earring bar in his left ear and wears a white shirt Human Evolution Why are humans the only species with a chin?    Hadza man making an arrow Human Evolution 'That's why there's 9 billion of us and not 9 billion of some other primate': Why our ability to adapt is humanity's 'superpower'    A close up of a reconstructed skull, missing its lower jaw, against a black background Human Evolution Homo habilis is the earliest named human. But is it even human?    Latest in Features A circular array of blue and pink and orange gas swirls against a dark starry background Space NASA telescope uncovers new mystery in supernova first spotted by Chinese astronomers 2,000 years ago —‬ Space photo of the week    A mother with dark hair leans over a small dark-haired child wearing a bright blue shirt. The mother presses a white handkerchief to the child's nose. Genetics Are allergies genetic?    close-up of the top part of an ancient Egyptian beaded dress Ancient Egyptians Beadnet dress: A 4,500-year-old ancient Egyptian funeral 'gown' that was in vogue during the Old Kingdom    A glowing nebula of pink, blue and orange is seen in the darkness of space Space Hubble images taken 25 years apart show big changes in the iconic Crab Nebula —‬ Space photo of the week    Aerial view of sand dunes and lagoons in Brazil's Lençóis Maranhenses National Park. Rivers & Oceans Lençóis Maranhenses: Brazil's dune-filled expanse that sits at the intersection of 3 biomes    A collage with an illustration of DNA Planet Earth DNA shed by every living thing is lurking in the environment — and it could tell us how Earth is changing in real time    LATEST ARTICLES