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Proto-Play

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Proto-Play

300 million years ago
±20 million years

In the shadowed forests of the Late Carboniferous, long before mammals, birds, or even dinosaurs, a few small, lizard-like amniotes began to do something remarkable — they started to move not just for need, but for pleasure. Between the still instincts of amphibians and the lively games of future mammals, something new flickered: proto-play.

These early land vertebrates had evolved bigger brains, sharper senses, and longer childhoods — a trio of traits that made experimentation possible. When a juvenile darted after falling leaves or practiced quick turns in the safety of the underbrush, it wasn’t hunting or fleeing. It was rehearsing life — discovering coordination, testing reflexes, and, perhaps for the first time, enjoying the act itself.

From these first playful gestures came a thread that would never break. Over millions of years, play would deepen — in reptiles, it became exploration; in birds, flight for fun; in mammals, social games and laughter. But it all began here, around 300 million years ago, when life took its first curious step toward delight!


That History Story, 

was first published on TST 7 months ago.
All story is part of the broader TST project.
Timelines, quotes, FAQs, and short explanations function as research anchors — designed to be reused, cross-linked, and updated as better evidence emerges.

The end!

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