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Built Like A Neanderthal
Part 2 - Evolution, Diet, and Body Type
By Dr. John M Berardi, Ph.D.
First published at www.t-nation.com, August 23
2005.
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In Part I of this article, we discussed the apex of musculo-skeletal
hypertrophy in our evolutionary past: the Neanderthal. In Part II, we'll
take a look at ourselves, Homo sapiens sapiens, and try to flesh-out
some meaningful insights about evolution, brains, brawn, fat, and disease.
Evolutionary Drives
Let's start with a Cliff Notes version of human evolution. While our
family tree is far from crystal clear, there are tons of fossils stretching
back millions of years. These fossils, littered remains of our past,
can give us a very good idea of where we came from.
Of course, for those not quite sold on all the tenets of evolution,
we'll make a
concession. Like the little pieces of evidence those crafty Crime Scene
Investigators use to re-create events from the past, fossils offer clues,
not conclusive evidence, about our own human past.
So yes, there's room for interpretation. And yes, that's likely why
some people who haven't had any anthropology training other than watching
the Discovery Channel Caveman Special feel they know more than any "archaeologist"
with years of "training." Yet, in the end, what we're presenting
here about our evolutionary past is tightly based on science. Further,
the prevalent theories in archaeology are the best working models, accounting
for all the evidence found to date — which is considerable.
So, based on this understanding, let's talk about what the fossil
record tells
us... about us. First of all, there is, at present, only one single
species of
human (although you might like to believe that certain people today
are a
sub-species of human — case in point, the hairy cretin in the
locker room who insists on hiking his leg up on the sink and blow-drying
his nether regions). This single species — our species —
flourished for one major reason. Surprisingly, that reason had little
to do with the human genome.
Instead, the modern human population is large and in charge because
of our culture. Now, we're not talking about culture in the tea party
sense or in the reality TV show sense. Rather, we're talking about the
learned behavior,
traditions, and ideologies developed by the ancients; all things that
members of a human society must form to be successful — in both
the conventional and evolutionary senses of the word.
So keep this in mind next time you consider evolution: our behavior,
not our
physiology, has ensured our survival as modern humans. Of course, our
physiology did have something to do with it, but, in most cases, our
physiology sets the upper and lower boundaries of our survival potential.
Between these boundaries, culture separates the Darwinian zeroes from
the Darwinian heroes.
Is That You, Ma?
With that said, it's important to take a step back and consider where
we've come from. To do so, let's take a look at our closest living relatives
— our cousin, the chimpanzee. Now, just like our cousin Betty
can't be our mom (well, in most states anyway), chimpanzees didn't parent
us.
In other words, we didn't actually evolve from chimps. We do, however,
share a common ancestor; and, interestingly, chimps have been evolving
for just as long as we' have! About 6 million years ago, the branch
that eventually became Homo sapiens and the branch that eventually became
what we think of as chimpanzees split off from another parent species.
Ever since this split, unlike the ape branch, our evolution has been
anything
but a straight shot. There have been several forks in our family tree,
some of
which were dead ends, others of which possibly interbred to produce
modern humans. The figure below presents a simplified version of our
evolutionary tree. For the sake of keeping things uncomplicated, there
are many forks not shown on the figure.

Figure 1. The Human Evolutionary Tree.
Stand Up Straight!
The defining moment that separated humans from apes is when our means
of locomotion changed from quadrupedal (walking on all fours) to bipedal
(walking on two legs). This was a gradual process that happened over
many millennia, not overnight. It wasn't big brains or intelligence
that kick-started our evolutionary trajectory, but rather our locomotion.
Beginning around 6 million years ago, the world became a much drier
and colder place, and the vast forests that once dominated the entire
African continent were gradually replaced by open savannas. Our ancestors
were the ones who survived by coming out of the trees and strolling
around the savannas.
It was well after our upright gait evolved that our brains began to
grow. The
first upright hominids had the same brain size as chimps, and the brain
didn't grow for a million or so years. Eventually, the brain started
to catch-up to our human-like body, and with increased brain size came
advancements in technology (first, stone tools, eventually weapons).
That big brain also afforded the mental flexibility necessary to survive
a harsh life in the savanna, competing for resources with some big,
mean Pleistocene predators. If you think life in the Serengeti is rough
today, imagine it with saber-tooth tigers and leopards on steroids.
However, our ancestors were by no means predators. Standing between
four and five feet high, they were no match for the big boys of the
savanna. Before we developed the technology and skills that made us
hunters, we spent millions of years as scavengers.
Instead of hunters, we were the hunted, and many of our unfortunate
ancestors died in the jaws of large African predators. How do we know
this? Hominid skulls have been found containing puncture marks matching
the canines of extinct leopards. We were leopard fodder, not a pretty
picture!
Yet some of our hominid ancestors would get their revenge, eventually
learning to exploit leopard kills by climbing the trees where leopards
stashed their prey and scurrying off with the scavenged remains.
It was during this time of leopard kill thievery that early hominids
began
eating a more meat-rich diet. This diet was obviously higher in protein
and fat than their predominantly frugivorous (fruit-eating) primate
cousins. Not
coincidentally, increased meat consumption is correlated with brain
growth in our evolutionary past.
Figure
2. Man the Hunted.
Use Your Head
Eventually, as brain size grew, these big brains permitted the fostering
of
strategies and technologies necessary to begin hunting on a regular
basis. Now, when we say hunting, we're not talking about the opportunistic
hunting of small animals. For example, chimpanzees in the wild have
been observed hunting colobus monkeys. Nope, we're talking scheduled,
frequent, technologically-assisted hunting . Bring on the beef!
Most archaeologists believe that regular hunting began around 1.6
million years ago with Homo erectus, the first hominid to migrate from
Africa into Europe and Asia. For those of you keeping score, about 6
million years ago our ancestors were on all fours, eating fruit in the
trees. Then, after about 4.4 million years of pacing around, scavenging
for food and trying to avoid being eaten by bigger, badder predators,
our ancestors finally started getting serious about eating meat on a
regular basis.
Our Cave Dwelling Is Better Than Your Cave Dwelling
However, we must keep in mind that over the course of these 4+ million
years, different populations became geographically separated and this
separation necessitated different evolutionary tracts. As hominids spread
throughout the Old World, populations became isolated in different parts
of what are now Europe, Asia, and Africa. These different populations
began to adapt to different environmental conditions.
Once the Ice Age began in earnest, hominids in Europe found it necessary
to cope with an arctic environment characterized by harsh winters and
large, angry mammals known as megafauna, such as the woolly rhino and
mammoth. It was this European stock who evolved into Neanderthals. Other
hominid populations evolved in Asia and Africa, becoming other versions
of Archaic Homo sapiens adapted to different, less blustery conditions.
As we discussed in Part I, Neanderthals are so interesting because
they were our most recent human cousins AND they were some of our most
robust hominid family members. We know this, again, from the fossil
records. Neanderthals had thick bones. As activity lays down bone just
like it lays down muscle, analyzing skeletal elements, particularly
long bones such as the femur and humerus, allows us to reconstruct the
muscles that were once there. All of this translates into load-bearing,
or how much and often they were lifting and carrying.
The main reason these guys had such thick bones and musculature is
likely their hunting strategies. It wasn't a cake walk being an Ice
Age hunter. Megafaunadidn't just lie down and surrender... even the
French ones. Those varmints needed killin'.
Ever read a South African newspaper? If not, here's a typical story:
A worker in the northern Hluhluwe section of South Africa's Umfolozi
game park was severely injured when gored by a black rhino.
If you think rhinos are fierce today, their Pleistocene ancestors
were almost
twice as large, with at least twice the chip on their shoulder. Now
imagine
engaging in a battle of life or death with one of these beasts using
nothing but your hands and a spear. Can anyone say functional strength?
Figure
3. Bring it.
Neanderthals Among Us?
As we've mentioned, just like we didn't evolve from chimps, we didn't
evolve
from Neanderthals either. Again, they're just a cousin, although a much
closer cousin than chimps. Anatomically modern humans first evolved
in Africa around 200,000 years ago from a local stock of Archaic Homo
sapiens.
The earliest modern humans were taller and more slender than Neanderthals
(our cousins being a relatively short 5'5") and other archaic humans
throughout the world. However, as we'll discuss, body types varied widely
based on many lifestyle factors — just as they do today. It's
important to keep this in mind when some evolutionary nutritionist or
fitness guru speaks longingly of the noble, lean, muscular savage and
then tries to sell you his book to help you reach your physique goals.
Getting back to our evolutionary story, anatomically modern humans
did
eventually interact with Neanderthals. It took a couple thousand years
but,
eventually, anatomically modern humans began spreading out of Africa
into Europe and Asia, coming into contact with archaic populations (including
Neanderthals) in the process. Talk about culture shock!
So, with all of these sub-species and with their fated meetings, how
did we go from these divergent human species to just one — Homo
sapiens?
Well, this issue is one of the most hotly debated issues in archaeology.
There are two schools of thought about the evolution of modern humans:
1. The Out of Africa hypothesis (a.k.a. "Eve" hypothesis)
2. The Multiregional hypothesis
Keep in mind that both camps begrudgingly agree that modern humans
did first evolve in Africa. However, the Eve folks say that modern humans
strode out of Africa, replacing every other population of slack-jawed
archaic
yokels–out-hunting them and out-breeding them. On the other hand,
the
Multiregionalists claim that there was independent evolution into modern
humans in different areas of the world, together with some gene flow.
The Eve hypothesis folks use mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) to support their
claims, suggesting that all of the diversity in mtDNA today (which is
surprisingly well conserved over hundreds of thousands of years) can
be traced back 200,000 years through the mother's line to a small group
in Africa. Given this scenario, Neanderthals are a dead branch on our
evolutionary tree as they've contributed nary a base pair to modern
DNA.
In contrast, the Multiregionalists claim that there was at least some
Neanderthal-on-modern hanky panky, giving rise to hybrid cave babies
and the mixing of archaic and modern genes.
Both camps have strengths and weaknesses in their arguments, and the
issue is far from being resolved. But let's not get too caught up in
that debate. What's important to this article is this: it's clear that
there was considerable variability in both archaic and modern human
populations. Not all Neanderthals were lean and muscular, and not all
early modern humans were tall and slender. This just makes good sense.
I Don't Do Dodo
So to all you wanna-be evolutionary nutritionists — when it
comes to evolution, species diversity is a safe bet. If there's one
thing that you can count on, it's that the climate, and thus the environment,
will change. If a species becomes physically specialized to exploit
one particular environmental niche, it goes the way of the dodo when
that environment disappears.
During the Pleistocene, the earth's population grew to the point where
people were competing for resources. Under these conditions, a person
who holds less muscle, stores more fat, and minimizes physical harm
with
technologically-assisted hunting stands a better chance of survival
than a
stockier, more physically formidable person. And folks, those atrophied,
fat
carrying, technological-minded omnivores are us.
Now let's be clear. Although anatomically modern humans were more
atrophied than archaic populations in general, the earliest anatomically
modern humans (pre-30,000 years) were no waifs, particularly those who
intermingled with Neanderthals in Europe. Studies have revealed that
the earliest European modern humans were nearly as robust as Neanderthals,
and they started becoming more gracile (losing muscle and bone) only
after 30,000 years ago. As mentioned in Part I, more muscle means more
energy expenditure and, in times of famine, muscle is not economical.
Again, how can we know the relative sizes of our ancestors? A good
skeletal
indicator of loading patterns is the midshaft cross-section of the femur.
The
thickness and shape of the femur is partially determined by how much
stress your quads and hams exert on the bone. Note that in the figure
below, the cross-sections of Neanderthal femurs are semi-circular and
robust, compared to the early modern human femurs, which were also robust,
but tear-drop shaped.
This suggests similar levels of activity between Neanderthals and early
modern humans in Europe, but differing types of activity. With more
bone on the lateral portions of the femur, Neanderthals were more equipped
for side-to-side movement. Compare the robusticity of Neanderthals and
early modern humans in the figure to that of modern elderly population,
and it's easy to see how bones reflect activity levels and muscle hypertrophy
or atrophy.

Figure 4. Midshaft femoral cross-sections of Neanderthals (left), early
European Modern Humans >30,000 BP (middle), and modern elderly population
in their 80's (right).
Modern Humans — From Badass to Fatass
Take a stroll through a Starbucks and ask yourself how many of the
grande
half-caff, extra caramel mocha-sipping bipedal hominids could hold their
own against a woolly rhino? Hell, most modern folks, if given just a
loin cloth and a spear, would probably get owned by a testy squirrel
in their own backyard.
Oh the humanity!
But give that same person a gun and the game's over. With a high-powered
rifle and some training he could bring down a black rhino from a safe
distance. Take that you rhino-bastard! As mentioned earlier, often a
species survives based on its culture, not its physiology. Technology
has become the hallmark of our evolution as modern humans, and has allowed
us to replace physical prowess with intellectual investment into technology.
In fact, one needs look no further than Central Texas (where we both
live,
shamefully, when discussing the case below) to witness the complete
and utter separation of all physical danger from the act of hunting.
In fact, you don't even have to lift your ass out of your computer chair.
Live-Shot, the brainchild of Texas entrepreneur John Lockwood, allows
you to use your mouse as a remote control for a gun mounted with a camera,
and pick-off anything from a blackbuck antelope to a wild boar.
Now a morbidly obese suburbanite can use a Remington .30-06 rifle
to blow the brains out of a Barbary sheep from North Africa, which has
been imported into Texas, all from the comfort of his own home in Ames,
Iowa.

Figure 5. Which of you vermin needs killin' today?
Our Nutritional Past and Present
Here's a great question for you: if Neanderthals or early Homo sapiens
had such good physiques, then why not eat like them so that we can be
big and ripped too? Wait a second; is that even a good question? I mean,
you wouldn't be foolish enough to assume that it was the Neanderthal
diet alone that made them so big and ripped? Would you? (please say
no, please say no).
Of course you wouldn't. (whew!) Yet with their careless interpretation
of our
past, evolutionary pop-nutritionists have begun to sell you trendy "paleo-diets"
that suggest we should return to our roots and eat like cavemen. Why
are people buying? Well, we think that they're buying because they just
don't know anything about what our ancestors ate or why they ate it.
So let's clear something up from the start. There was no single "Paleo-Diet."
Back in the day, humans ate whatever they could get their hands on.
Seriously, whatever. Life during the Paleolithic was far from idyllic.
People lived short, rough, smelly lives. They didn't sit back and make
food choices. Dahling, do you feel like the Beef Tar-Tar or the
Chicken Cordon Bleu?
They ate what didn't eat them. And since food surplus rarely existed
before
agriculture, what they ate depended on what was available in their particular
locality. High carb, high protein, high fat, whatever. If it's there
for the
eatin', they ate it; and different populations had different dietary
patterns.
Also, it's important to keep in mind that there was no "Paleo
Body Type." There was a ton of variability in the sizes and shapes
of our evolutionary ancestors, just like there are many physical varieties
of people around the world today. Granted, people in the past didn't
have as many cheaply gathered empty calories as we have today. Therefore,
it would've been hard to find lots of fat Neanderthals or early Homo
sapiens. Yet there's no question that there were a few fat people in
the Paleolithic.
Need evidence? Well, check out the Venus figurines found spread–extensively
— throughout Europe and Asia. Oh yeah, baby's got back! These
figurines have been dated at about 25,000 years ago. These accurate
portrayals of "fat chicks," well before the advent of agriculture,
indicate that they must have seen fatties even back then.

Figure 6. Human variety, past and present. Homo erectus (A), Homo
heidelbergensis (B), Homo neanderthalensis (C), Venus figurines from
Europe and Asia, 25,000 BP (D), Modern Kung Bushmen, Africa (E), Modern
Yanomamo, Amazon (F).
Now that these archaeological "truths" are out of the way,
we can be a bit more open-minded about studying nutrition and the archaeological
record.
What Healthy Ancients Ate
Make no mistake, people in BOTH the past AND the present eat whatever
provides them with calories when they're hungry! Put a starving Paleolithic
man in today's society, and he'd gorge himself on Twinkies and whatever
else he could get his hands on, just like any one of us would do today
if we were hungry (or, of course, if we had no self control).
Yet what was the diet of a successful Paleolithic person? Here are
the basic
elements:
1. Protein-rich.
Humans have evolved on a diet rich in protein since our humble beginnings
in East Africa millions of years ago. As we mentioned, our earliest
ancestors were scavengers who exploited the fact that the marrow from
the leg bones of a single large animal provides about 1,500 calories
of protein and fat.
Later, when hunting became more established, protein consumption increased,
as evidenced by a particular nitrogen isotope, 15N, which increases
as it passes up the food chain from plants to animals. Therefore, large
amounts of 15N (found in bone collagen) reflects meat consumption. In
some cases, Paleolithic folks apparently acted as top-level carnivores,
almost exclusively eating a protein-fat diet.
But it is important to note that rather than this being the ideal
diet many
paleo-nutritionists are selling you, an almost exclusive high protein-fat
diet
was not the norm, and in fact is was a less-desirable diet than a well-balanced
one. In fact, there is a whole school of thought in archaeology known
as ‘nutritional ecology', which states that people in the past
who were able to exploit a broader range of food resources were healthier
and thus more successful than people who ate the same number of calories,
but from nutritionally-poor or restricted sources.
A broad-spectrum diet ensures a good supply of macro- AND micro-nutrients.
In other words, a calorie is not a calorie, not then and not now.
2. Rich in whole vegetables, fruit, and nuts.
Our ancestors may have been big meat eaters, but they were by no means
carnivores. Plants were eaten in abundance as evidenced by carbonized
seeds and plant remains, microscopic remains of plants on stone tools,
microscopic pollen and phytoliths, coprolites, and indirect sources
such as skeletal pathology, dental wear patterns, artistic depictions,
and ethnographic observations.
Vegetable remains are underrepresented in the archaeological record,
because they are more susceptible to decay than, say, stones, or even
bones. But in rare examples of extremely good organic preservation,
it is an eye-opener to witness the quantity and diversity of vegetable
food. For example, a 23,000 year-old fishing camp (Ohalo II) was recently
exposed on the shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel due to a drought
and receding water levels.
Water had submerged the site for most of its existence, preserving
the majority of organic remains, including bones, wood, nuts, and seeds.
Protein was definitely not in short supply, judging from the remains
of fish, tortoise, birds, hare, fox, gazelle, and deer, to name a few.
But the seeds of numerous plants, fruits, and nuts were recovered.
The occupants ate various edible grasses (wild barley), and wild forms
of
almonds, olives, pistachios, and grapes. This "broad-spectrum"
economy is
characteristic of our Paleolithic ancestors — contrary to the
ideas of some
evolutionary nutritionists recommending the elimination of almost all
non-protein, fat, and veggie foods, including grains, nuts, and fruits;
these
recommendations are based on their limited knowledge of the archaeological
record.
Of course, based on current science, we also know that wild plants
contain
antioxidants, omega-3 fatty acids, and micronutrients that fill nutritional
voids left by our modern diet, and decrease the risk for chronic diseases.
These foods both filled nutritional voids present in the high protein
and fat intakes of some of our ancestors and formed the bulk of intake
in others.
Our ancestors had it right, though, as they ate a wide variety of fruits
and
vegetables. Current studies have shown a direct correlation between
the variety of fruits and vegetables eaten, and the benefits seen from
the micronutrients. For those who justify a lack of vegetables in their
diet by taking a multivitamin: sorry, but supplementing individual vitamin
intake, as opposed to actually eating the fruits and vegetables, does
not provide the same benefits.
3. Moderate carbohydrates from their original source.
If we can judge from modern hunter-gatherers, Paleolithic folks loved
their
carbs, too. Modern hunter-gatherers have been known to travel for days
to find bee hives for honey. Once discovered, they will often gorge
on pounds of honey; ingesting thousands of calories of glucose and fructose
in one sitting. But the fact remains that throughout most of our past,
simple sugars were hard to come by, at least by today's standards.
Carbohydrates were eaten by our prehistoric ancestors primarily in
the form of vegetables, fruit, and whole grains — that's right,
even before agricultural
development. Most Paleo-diet folks will have you believe that carbohydrates
and grains were virtually absent during the Paleolithic. Not so.
Again, the archaeological record shows much dietary variability according
to
where and when people lived. In fact, people in the Mexico Highlands
ate a diet rich in primarily carbohydrates and fat, even before the
advent of agriculture. At the beginning of the Holocene, they exploited
the increased growth of wild plant life by gorging on acorns, squash,
and other wild plants, while supplementing with occasional wild game.
Of course, grains were domesticated fairly recently by the first farmers
in the
Fertile Crescent around 10,000 years ago, and shortly thereafter in
other hearth areas, such as the Indus Valley, China, and Central America.
The predictability of these food sources made them an attractive alternative
to hand-to-hand combat with wild game. So humans began eating more of
them. And perhaps this is where some problems arose. A diet rich in
processed grains, at the expense of other foods such as lean protein,
good fats, and a high fruit and vegetable intake, is a prescription
for the metabolic syndrome that plagues western culture today.
A recent study looked at two groups of Shuar women in Ecuador. One
group
practiced a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, and the other group recently
switched to an agricultural lifestyle. Women from the agricultural group
had higher leptin (a hormone correlated with body fat stores —
more fat, more leptin) and plasma insulin levels, as well as more fat
mass. In contrast, the leptin concentrations from the hunter-gather
communities were found to be the lowest mean value ever reported from
a population of healthy females.
There's no question that our genes, if you will, dislike a processed,
grain-heavy diet. And that's a shame for our bread-loving friends as
many folks, including the misguided ADA folks who established the recently
revised yet still grain-laden food pyramid, have considered processed
grains an essential part of a healthy diet. Not so — although
some grains, the unprocessed kind, can be part of a healthy, physique
enhancing diet.
Of course, it's important not to go to extremes here. Just because
diets full of grains (at the expense of other foods like protein, fruits,
veggies, and good fats) are a nightmare for most folks, especially non-exercisers,
we shouldn't go as far as saying non-fruit and veggie carbs should never
be eaten (as some evolutionary nutritionists do). Research has indicated
that there are times when our genes do like carbohydrates that aren't
of the fruit and veggie persuasion. During and after exercise, our ability
to tolerate carbohydrates is dramatically increased — even in
type II diabetics!
Based on current literature, we recommend that foods like grains–even
simple carbohydrates — can and should be ingested during and after
exercise for optimal recovery and muscle gains. However, for the rest
of the day, and on non-workout days, it's best to get your carbohydrates
from slow-absorbing and vitamin-rich sources like vegetables and fruits.
Whole, unprocessed grains, nuts, and legumes are also acceptable in
moderation, as part of a well-balanced intake including protein, fruits,
veggies, and essential fatty acids. But don't go hog-wild on the grains.
Your best bet is to follow the 10 Habits we outline in our Gourmet Nutrition
book. These are:
1) Eat every 2-3 hours
2) Eat lean, complete protein with each meal
3) Eat veggies with each meal
4) Eat "other" carbs only during and after exercise
5) Eat a balanced fat profile containing 1/3 of each type of fat
6) Ditch the calorie-containing drinks
7) Use whole foods as your primary source of nutrition
8) Have 10% foods
9) Develop food preparation strategies
10) Balance daily food choices with healthy variety
4. Balanced Fatty-Acid Profile
Although prehistoric fat intake may have been similar to the modern
western diet in terms of overall percentage of fat calories to protein
and carbohydrates, the breakdown of saturated fatty acids (SFA), monounsaturated
fatty acids (MUFA), and polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) was considerably
different in the past.
In general, the ancient diet was richer in MUFA, with a better balance
of SFA
and PUFA. Most notably, the overabundance of omega-6 fatty acids, at
the expense of omega-3 fatty acids, that we see in the modern diet has
been shown to promote a blood fat profile in which "bad" cholesterol
(LDL) is elevated.
In addition to this, LDL cholesterol is more prone to oxidation and,
downstream, the development of coronary heart disease. Add to this the
fact that omega-6 fats have been shown to be pro-inflammatory and you've
got a pretty strong link between our current, out-of-balance fat intake
and our high prevalence of disease.
The primary culprit for this imbalance is vegetable oil (e.g., corn
oil), which
is rich in omega-6 fats. Wait, didn't prehistoric people in the Americas
eat
corn? Sure, but remember that unprocessed corn has very little fat per
unit of weight. Corn oil is a hyper-processed product of our nation's
massive corn industry. Let's put it this way: to get the same amount
of fat from 1 tablespoon of corn oil, you'd have to eat 4 1/2 POUNDS
of corn kernels. How many prehistoric people do you think had access
to that much corn?
Not only is vegetable oil added to most foods during preparation,
our feedlot
animals (such as cattle) are fed the same grain fat, which is stored
in their
adipose tissue, and then transferred to us in the food chain.
Wild and free-range animals that feed on wild grasses have a much more
favorable fatty acid profile, and thus are much healthier for human
consumption. Further, domesticated (feedlot) animals have much higher
proportions of fat in general, and saturated fat in particular, than
wild animals.
Wild animals almost always show a seasonal variation in storage fat,
and even the very fattest wild land mammals contain 60-75% less total
fat than the average domesticated animal.
Eat Like The Ancients?
So now that we've discussed our evolution as well as our ancestors'
dietary
intake, hopefully it's clear that invoking a "paleo" diet
in the name of lean
bodies, big muscles, and disease prevention is a bit misleading for
the
following reasons:
1. For starters, there was no "paleo" diet. The ancients
ate what they could,
when they could, where they could. Their (and our) genes were well adapted
to a variety of dietary intakes. If there was one common "paleo"
feature it was this — they didn't eat processed foods or feed-lot
animals.
They ate foods in their natural state with little processing and they
certainly
profited from this lack of "manipulated food." Of course,
we'd profit too if
we'd stop being so lazy and start taking an interest in what we're feeding
our
bodies. But come on now, do we really need to examine the evolutionary
record to realize that Wonder Bread and McDonalds are bad for us?
2. Secondly, there is no single, big muscled, ripped-up, ancient prototype.
Bodies in ancient times were almost as diverse as we see them today,
outliers like Ronnie Coleman and the 1000lb man removed. Of course,
in ancient times, bodies were shifted more toward the lean end of the
spectrum as a result of 2 things: first — food scarcity, second
— the high energy cost of obtaining food. Eliminate our current
food surplus and get us to move around more and obesity would disappear
overnight. Again, it doesn't take an evolutionary expert or a hunter-gatherer
to teach us that eating less crappy food and exercising more means fewer
fatties.
3. Finally, the lower incidence of disease in our ancestors was likely
due to
one or a combination of the following factors. First, they had a high
fruit and
vegetable intake and there's a correlation between fruit and veggie
intake and disease protection.
Secondly, hunter-gatherers were much more active than the cubicle-dweller
and as activity levels are associated with disease risk, it's easy to
understand why our technologically assisted society is suffering at
the hands of CVD, obesity, and diabetes.
Finally, early moderns simply didn't live as long as we do. Many of
our current diseases of aging begin to show up after our 30s. As the
average age of our Paleolithic ancestors was 32, perhaps they simply
didn't live long enough to manifest the diseases of aging. Modern medicine
allows us to live seven to ten decades when our ancestors couldn't.
Yes, there were some Paleolithic people who lived well into their 40's
and 50's, and yes, there were some Paleolithic people who clearly died
of debilitating diseases, but they were not typical.
In the end, to attribute some magical, mystical, muscle building,
fat reducing, disease preventing powers to the diets of the ancients
is an oversimplification at best, and at worst, it is purposefully misleading
people in an attempt to fleece them of their money.
The ancients lived completely different lives, lives that few of us
today would
choose if given the option. Therefore, rather than trying to mimic the
ancients, we need to find ways to develop healthy lifestyle patterns
relevant to today's world. Sometimes there's overlap. Yet there's no
need to try to "eat like a caveman" when you can eat like
a healthy modern man instead.
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