Thuban wrote:
theDrifter wrote:
since they are seemingly capable of walking upright
On their hind legs? What? Probably not very well, or for extended periods of time... griffons are definitely quadrupeds! I think that's a major part of why, linguistically, most of us seem inclined to favor 'feet' rather than 'hands.'
I believe there is significant evidence against the "quadruped" theory of griffons (in SK). A mouse, for example, is a quadruped, but still capable of standing on its hind legs and holding a peanut, for example. When it decides to walk, it will need to leave the peanut behind. A monkey is something that we think of somewhere in between two- and four-legged locomotion. Give it a stick to hold, and when it wants to run, it won't be holding it aloft for long.
However, any object held by a griffon will not prevent him or her from running (and griffons can run while landed in SK). Imagine even the most sophisticated chimpanzee running with a two-handed sword or a delicate glass staff. Griffons in SK can accomplish this easily.
Quote:
Without getting into too much IC info: evolution is a slow, slow process
I don't know how evolution works in SK, but in the real world, evolution is not always a "slow, slow" process. During times of great selective pressure, a population will rapidly either die off or evolve. The easiest example of this is drug-resistant bacteria.