
Paleo Diet: Can Our Caveman Ancestors Teach Us the Best Modern Diet?
Our eating patterns should perhaps be modeled on what Paleolithic hunter-gatherers ate.
Should we look backward for clues to the perfect human diet? And not just back a few generations—to a world before french fries were a major source of vegetables and the Super Big Gulp encouraged the downing of 64 ounces of soda in one sitting—but waaaaaay back? Some people think so, arguing that we ought to turn to a "caveman diet" or "paleo diet" based on what they think early humans and human ancestors ate for millions of years, from the Paleolithic era until the agricultural revolution began about 10,000 years ago. "Seventy percent of our calories come from foods these folks never would have consumed," says Loren Cordain, an exercise scientist at Colorado State University in Fort Collins and author of The Paleo Diet.
There's certainly broad agreement that in the past few generations we have strayed far from an eating pattern that supports maximum health. Whatever our ancestors ate, it sure wasn't the current Western diet, which is heavy in saturated fat, salt, and processed foods based heavily on soybeans and on corn. That style of eating has been associated with a variety of health problems and is, by all accounts, a mess.
Cordain suggests we mimic the diet of our hunter-gatherer forebears and eat lean meats (especially grass-fed beef, wild game, and free-range birds, rather than farm-raised animals), fish, plants, fruit, and nuts. Milk is not on his list; he says there are no evolutionary roots for it in the hunter-gatherer society, where milking wild animals wasn't possible. And contrary to most nutritional advice, he disdains grains, even whole ones, because he says our bodies aren't well adapted to eating them, especially in mass quantities.
The study of how human diets evolved is a rich field, with researchers approaching the problem from angles including examining dental microwear—the tiny pits and dents in teeth that suggest how they were used—and hypothesizing about how cooking affected our progress. It's also full of pitfalls, because trying to reverse-engineer what exactly early humans and prehumans ate is difficult, and fossils may actually lead us astray. For example, says Peter Ungar, an anthropologist at the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville, conventional wisdom used to hold that because the skull of one ancestral close cousin who lived 2 million years ago—"Nutcracker Man"—featured big, flat teeth, he must have used them to feed primarily on nuts, seeds, and other hard sources of nutrition.
Not so, says Ungar. Now researchers believe that jaw and teeth structure can indicate only the capability to eat certain types of food, perhaps in times of shortage or scarcity, not that those foods were their most common or optimal choices. Just look at gorillas, our primate relatives: They have huge molars and chewing muscles for eating leaves and tough foods, yet 11 months of the year they eat softer things, like fruit and bugs, that don't require that kind of masticatory firepower.
So Ungar says it's not at all clear that we should eat foods X, Y, and Z simply because we suspect our ancestors did. "Most people who study the fossils of our human ancestors are very reticent about using what little we know about their diets to show what we should be eating today," he says. Instead, he points to variety as the real key to the evolution of the human diet. "Our success is pegged to the fact that we have been able to survive in so many places," he says. William Leonard, chair of the anthropology department at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., agrees. "The hallmark of human nutrition for me is the flexibility and diversity," he says. "It's the ability to make a meal in any environment."
Ok, this is painful. You guys obviously weren't taught anything about evolution at school.
Someone said: 'people's lives are being extended whether they are weak or not thanks to all the modern medical wonders like anti-biotics', then you said 'everyone here is denying that life is still survival of the fittest' ??? Do you not see the contradiction?? If we are extending people's lives (who would have died without modern intervention), it is NOT survival of the fittest, we humans are NOT evolving at all now, because despite our weaknesses, we wil not be culled from the population before we are old enough to pass on our genes. There-fore there are no selective pressures. We stay alive, despite being weak and sickly, which most of us ultimately are.
We EVOLVED, our DNA was SHAPED over 2.5 million years eating MEAT, ANIMAL FAT (the most prized part of the animal), a few berries and some tubers & nuts when seasonally available. This means that for 99% of our genetic history we ate a hunter-gatherer diet, and when a species deviates from its natural diet (lion=meat, rabbit=grass etc) bad stuff happens. When humans started agriculture and replaced meat with grains, thier height dropped 6 inches, their teeth crowded and wore away (paleo skeletons show perfect teeth and bone-structure) and guess what, our brain size has SHRUNK 11% since this process started taking place. We have only just got back to the life expectancy of our hunter-gatherer ancestors in the last hundred years, they lived to a long and healthy life when they weren't being eaten by a predator. How can any other enviroment than the one you are evolutionarily adapted to be healthy?? We have changed slightly, as evidenced by what happens to aboriginal populations when introduced to a western diet, they cant deal with it as well as we can, but that doesn't change the fact that what is causing all these modern health problems is a major major divergence from our natural diet.
You people who are still stuck in anti-fat fairy land have obviously been asleep these past 10 years, never mind, you can wait to catch up with modern media while up-to-date scientists are decades ahead.
I think that everything just needs to have a balance. Before, people would eat at a certain time, the work they did required more labor, went to bed at a certain time, everything was more organized. Now a day’s people eat a lot of fast food, there are more technological advances that require almost no physical work from us, and people aren’t organized in their things such as eating habits and sleeping habits. Everything has to do with society and how it has revolutionized the way people live and what they do. Food was much fresher before, including the animals and the vegetation. Everything is now processed and refrigerated for weeks before the consumer buys it. But it also has to do with how we live; we don’t have time to go hunting to eat fresh meat. We have to do what is more convenient for our fast pace society. EVERYTHING and I mean everything from morals to family to life style to nutrition has changed and we can’t go back to those customs simply because of the life style we live in now. Everything happens so fast one sometimes doesn’t even realize what is going on. Yes I agree that before everything seemed better and more nutritious but as everything revolutionizes we must learn to adapt and accept what we have now. What we have to do now is be more careful in what we eat and how much exercise we do. Like I mentioned before, it is all just a balance of everything.
The only things I eat are meat, fish, eggs, veggies, fruit, olive oil, almonds, and sunflower seeds. The only thing I drink is water. No grains, dairy, beans, or starchy vegetables (such as potatoes). No processed foods either. I also do not drink fruit juice; it causes too much of a sugar rush. I am not a diabetic and never have been but decided to get a glucose monitor. I have tested myself at several times during the day and my glucose has never been above 105 mg/dL! At the same time, the lowest I have ever seen it was at 68 mg/dL one morning, so not only do I not have to worry about high blood sugar; I also don't have to worry about low blood sugar!
I have seen some of the most ridiculous criticisms ever of the paleo diet. Number 1: We can't eat the Paleo diet because most of the animals Paleo people ate are extinct. Okay, so we eat modern animals! Number 2: not enough calcium. Eat more broccoli! Most people in the world don't drink milk and they have very little calcium deficiency. Number 3: all that fat is bad! The response: no it's not! Diets high in monounsatured fat (as found in olive oil, nuts, and seeds) actually help protect the heart. Saturated fat is actually necessary in moderate amounts.
It's been shown time and time again that the thing that is killing Americans is not excess fat, but rather excess carbs. While explaining this would take too long, let me explain how excess carbs make you fat. Try the following experiment. Eat a tablespoon of pure sugar. A few hours later, eat a tablespoon of pure olive oil. Which one made you want more and more? The sugar! And the olive oil? It made you feel full! Even if you wanted to, the average person would not be able to eat enough fat to actually get fat. People today are getting fat because they are eating way too many carbs. If you're eating above more than about 200g of carbs a day, unless you're a marathon runner, there is a definite problem. If you get hungry easily, try downing some olive oil and you won't be hungry anymore.
Long live the paleo diet!
I think human health depende on more than juste food.the right quantity of ingredients in the right saison will give our sinces a good feelings. but live healthy for long time,it needs a clean oxigine a comfortable job a good night sleep a very good friends. ext...
I think human health depende on more than juste food.the right quantity of ingredients in the right saison will give our sinces a good feelings. but live healthy for long time,it needs a clean oxigine a comfortable job a good night sleep a very good friends. ext...
I think human health depende on more than juste food.the right quantity of ingredients in the right saison will give our sinces a good feelings. but live healthy for long time,it needs a clean oxigine a comfortable job a good night sleep a very good friends. ext...
I think human health depende on more than juste food.the right quantity of ingredients in the right saison will give our sinces a good feelings. but live healthy for long time,it needs a clean oxigine a comfortable job a good night sleep a very good friends. ext...
avoid saturated fat, eat food rich in protein, vegetables, fibres, eat grilled meat , not fried, and do exercice on a daily basis... and sure you will be just fine :-)
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