What Actually was the Stone Age Diet?

Abstract Purpose: In the last few years there has been considerable talk of the 'Stone Age diet' as an attractive alternative to the 'modern' diet. The underlying idea is that recent distortions of diet are likely to be harmful and that, if we can recover a primeval diet, we will...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: PHD, FSA J A J Gowlett Ma
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1044.5193
http://www.encognitive.com/files/What%20Actually%20was%20the%20Stone%20Age%20Diet.pdf
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Summary:Abstract Purpose: In the last few years there has been considerable talk of the 'Stone Age diet' as an attractive alternative to the 'modern' diet. The underlying idea is that recent distortions of diet are likely to be harmful and that, if we can recover a primeval diet, we will live in closer harmony with our digestive systems and their evolutionary biochemistry. This paper aims to evaluate that set of ideas rigorously in relation to the extensive and sometimes detailed records of the past. Design: Comparative and direct palaeoanthropology and archaeology. Methodology: To review evidence of the comparative picture established by the nearest living relations of hominids (extant apes), and of the deep view given by the fossil records and archaeological evidence. Results: The broad outline of the evolutionary record is becoming increasingly clear: human ancestors diverged from the last common ape ancestor about 8-10 million years ago. Since then major stages of dietary evolution can be traced, involving the incorporation of roots/ tubers and additional meat into a previously largely fruit-based diet. Within the last 2 million years, early humans colonized highly diverse environments, including arctic regions where there was no choice but to eat meat. Conclusions: There was no one Stone Age diet. Overall, diets of the past varied greatly. The adoption of agriculture within the last few thousand years led to great changes in diet, especially concentration on single cereals and milk. Keywords: diet, Stone Age, hominid origins, apes, Palaeolithic. Much of the modern diet is suspect-often dominated by over-processed foods. Logically, then, we might turn to the past to find the foods that our species evolved with. It is tempting to think that by going back further we will get closer to the ideal. Hence, the Stone Age diet, the idea that in primeval times all was well, that more modern ways of life have made something go wrong, and that by drawing upon old recipes we can put things right again. If this synopsis ...