Paleo alimentis cibaria ibimus ad maiorum

Paleo alimentis cibaria ibimus ad maiorum

Paleo alimentis cibaria ibimus ad maiorum

A Paleo diet an a Paleo diet?

Conamur omnibus modis compositionem huius diaeta supposita perfecte convenire nostris necessitatibus geneticis cognoscere. Sed nonne globalis normae hodiernae victu faciem nostram obvelant? Poteratne tunc esse unum tantum regimen? Verisimile non est. Pro archaeozoologist, Jean-Denis Vigne, etiam dubium non est. " Paleolithic per immensum spatium plus quam 2 decies centena millia annorum divulgatur. Tamen in hoc uno, climata multum variata sunt: ​​cogitare de periodis glaciationis vel calefactionis! Hoc implicat quod copiae alimentorum copiae, sive originis plantae sive animalis, etiam fluctuarunt. [Praeterea], notandum non est, per hoc tempus plures species hominum etiam inter se secutae, quae habitus inter se diversi pascendi erant…”

Secundum articulum MM in American Acta nutritionis Fusce, victus a Loren Cordain propositus, omnino non responderet iis quae maiores nostri comederunt. Fuerunt, exempli gratia, herbae magis quam carnivorae, venationes quae probabiliter tantum incolarum in altitudine altitudinum viventium praedominantur. Insuper homines prehistorici libertatem eligendi quod comederunt non habuerunt; quod erat praesto non comeditquae nimirum aliquantum de loco ad locum, et subinde anni variatur.

Investigatio anthropologica Paleo-1-9 (gratias figunt in ossibus vel electrum dentium praesentes) mirabilem ostendit diversitas manducans se gerendi rationibus temporis flexibilitatem ab ordinatione testante. Neanderthales Europaeae, exempli gratia, cibum peculiarem habebant, cum Homo Sapiens, nostra species, multo magis varios fructus pascere poterat, ut navales vel fructus originis plantae secundum suum locum. .

sources

Garn SM, Leonard WR. What did our ancestors eat? Nutrition Reviews. 1989;47(11):337–345. [PubMed] Garn SM, Leonard WR. What did our ancestors eat? Nutrition Reviews. 1989;47(11):337–345. [PubMed] Milton K. Nutritional characteristics of wild primate foods: do the diets of our closest living relatives have lessons for us? Nutrition. 1999;15(6):488–498. [PubMed] Casimir MJ. Basic Human Nutritional Needs. In: Casimir MJ, editor. Flocks and Food: A Biocultural Approach to the the Study of Pastoral Foodways. Verlag, Koln, Weimar & Wien; Bohlau: 1991. pp. 47–72. Leonard WR, Stock JT, Velggia CR. Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Diet and Nutrition. Evolutionary Anthropology. 2010;19:85–86. Ungar PS, editor. Evolution of the Human Diet: The Known, The Unknown, and the Unknowable. Oxford University Press; New York: 2007. Ungar PS, Grine FE, Teaford MF. Diet in Early Homo: A Review of the Evidence and a New Model of Adaptive Versatility. Annual Review of Anthropology. 2006;35:209–228. Ungar PS, Sponheimer M. The Diets of Early Hominins. Science. 2011;334:190–193. [PubMed] Elton S. Environments, Adaptation, And Evolutionary Medicine: Should We Be Eating a Stone Age Diet? In: O’Higgins P, Elton S, editors. Medicine and Evolution: Current Applications, Future Prospects. CRC Press; 2008. pp. 9–33. Potts R. Variability Selection in Hominid Evolution. Evolutionary Anthropology. 1998;7:81–96.

Leave a Reply