It is one of the most unusual evolutionary ideas yet proposed: humans are amphibious apes who lost their fur, started to walk upright and developed big brains because they took to living by the water's edge.
Although treated with derision by some academics over the past 50 years, the aquatic ape theory is still backed by a small group of scientists.
They are about to hold a London conference where several speakers, including British naturalist and broadcaster David Attenborough, will voice support for the theory.
"Humans are very different from other apes," said Peter Rhys Evans, an organiser of Human Evolution: Past, Present and Future. "We lack fur, walk upright, have big brains and subcutaneous fat and have a descended larynx, a feature common among aquatic animals but not apes."
Standard evolutionary models suggest these features appeared at separate times and for different reasons. The aquatic ape theory argues they all occurred because our ancestors decided to live in or near water for hundreds of thousands or possibly millions of years.