Eyesight, rather than legs, prompted large animal life to venture onto the land for the first time some 385 million years ago, according to a new study.

Researchers at Northwestern University in the US studied the fossil record and discovered the eyes of our ancient aquatic ancestors tripled in size before they moved from sea to land.

It is thought the ability to see food on the land, prompted animals to try to get it and they then gradually evolved limbs that made this much easier.

Professor Malcolm MacIver said: “Why did we come up onto land 385 million years ago? We are the first to think that vision might have something to do with it.

“We found a huge increase in visual capability in vertebrates just before the transition from water to land.

“Our hypothesis is that maybe it was seeing an unexploited cornucopia of food on land – millipedes, centipedes, spiders and more – that drove evolution to come up with limbs from fins.”

Insects and other invertebrates had colonised the land about 50 million years before the vertebrates took the same step.

The dramatic increase in eye size makes little sense if they were just being used underwater, but it is possible to see 70 times further through air than water.

Fellow researcher Professor Lars Schmitz said: “Bigger eyes are almost worthless in water because vision is largely limited to what’s directly in front of the animal.

“But larger eye size is very valuable when viewing through air. In evolution, it often comes down to a trade-off. Is it worth the metabolic toll to enlarge your eyes? What’s the point?

“Here we think the point was to be able to search out prey on land.”

The researchers also suggested this increased ability to see the surrounding world may have made the animals more intelligent.

In water, they had to react with split-second timing to things they saw – food or a predator – because this only happened at a relatively short distance.

Having more time to consider the world may have driven the evolution of more complex, strategic thinking.

Fossil discoveries Show all 7 1 /7 Fossil discoveries Fossil discoveries Archaeopteryx 1861: A hugely important fossil, this 147-million-year-old rock slab contains the remains of the earliest known bird. With its combination of bird and dinosaur characteristics, it is a famous snapshot of evolution in action. It's early discovery has since been queried as more complete examples were found (as above). Fossil discoveries Ida - The Link 1983: Ida - a tiny 47-million-year-old fossil - was discovered at the Messel Pit southeast of Frankfurt am Main in Germany. But it was only in May 2009 that she was introduced to the world, at the head of a whirlwind publicity campaign as the supposed "missing link" in human evolution. Getty Images Fossil discoveries Homo heidelbergensis 1994: A skull of a Homo heidelbergensis, dated at 400,000 years ago and considered to be amongst the most complete fossil skulls ever found. REUTERS/Paul Hanna Fossil discoveries Australopithecus sediba 2010: A partial cranium which belonged to human ancestor Australopithecus sediba, which was unearthed from a pit in South Africa AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Fossil discoveries Darwinopterus 2010: The discovery of the fossil of the Darwinopterus filled a 155 million-year evolutionary gap PA Fossil discoveries Fossil fight 2013: 'Astounding' fossil find from Montana revealing two dinosaurs locked in mortal combat Fossil discoveries Ichthyosaur graveyard 2014: One of the 46 fossils found at the site in southern Chile Wolfgang Stinnesbeck

A paper called Massive increase in visual range preceded the origin of terrestrial vertebrates was published by the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

The researchers studied 59 fossils from before the water-to-land transition and found the average eye orbit size rose from 13mm to 36mm – over a very long time.

“The tripling of orbit size took 12 million years,” Professor MacIver said. “This is the timescale of evolution, which boggles our mind.”