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#11
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pearl wrote:
"We do not say that [old hominid] sites look like our chimp sites. What we do say is some of the flakes we found in some of the pieces of shatter resemble those found at some of the technologically simplest [hominid] sites in East Africa," he said. "The implication is that older hominids practised nut-cracking like the chimps." Could be true,, but "Modern" man was a hunter, and killer from the get go, so was Neanderthal Man, they both ate meat and veggies,, so do I :-) -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread, Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#12
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pearl wrote:
This SHOT DOWN ALL OTHER "THEORIES" BEFORE HER. Blowing out all of the earlier theories. She had the "real" facts, and had them on film, from the hunting, to the eating of meat. She even recorded at least one case of cannibalisms . Why don't you check that out, I've even seen the videos of it. Everyone was surprised by these facts. Gombe National Park is a limited area, and competition is high. '..The park is made up of narrow mountain strip of land about 16 kilometers long and 5 kilometers wide on the shore of Lake Tanganyika. From the lake shore steep slopes rises up to form the Rift Valley's escapement, which is covered by the dense forest. .. The dominating vegetation in this park include the open deciduous woodland on the upper slopes, gallery forests on the valleys and lower slopes. This type of vegetation is unique in Tanzania and has been supporting a large number of Chimpanzee, Baboons, and a large number of bird species. Other species seen here are colobus, blue and red tail monkeys. I was not going to even mention Baboons, meat eating is an accepted practice for them. -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread, Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#13
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"Rodney Long" wrote in message ...
pearl wrote: "We do not say that [old hominid] sites look like our chimp sites. What we do say is some of the flakes we found in some of the pieces of shatter resemble those found at some of the technologically simplest [hominid] sites in East Africa," he said. "The implication is that older hominids practised nut-cracking like the chimps." Could be true,, but "Modern" man was a hunter, and killer from the get go, How? 'Brown says that pushing the emergence of Homo sapiens from about 160,000 years ago back to about 195,000 years ago "is significant because the cultural aspects of humanity in most cases appear much later in the record - only 50,000 years ago - which would mean 150,000 years of Homo sapiens without cultural stuff, such as evidence of eating fish, of harpoons, anything to do with music (flutes and that sort of thing), needles, even tools. This stuff all comes in very late, except for stone knife blades, which appeared between 50,000 and 200,000 years ago, depending on whom you believe." Fleagle adds: "There is a huge debate in the archeological literature regarding the first appearance of modern aspects of behavior such as bone carving for religious reasons, or tools (harpoons and things), ornamentation (bead jewelry and such), drawn images, arrowheads. They only appear as a coherent package about 50,000 years ago, and the first modern humans that left Africa between 50,000 and 40,000 years ago seem to have had the full set. As modern human anatomy is documented at earlier and earlier sites, it becomes evident that there was a great time gap between the appearance of the modern skeleton and 'modern behavior.'" ... http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0223122209.htm so was Neanderthal Man, they both ate meat and veggies,, "COLUMBUS, Ohio - The bands of ancient Neanderthals that struggled throughout Europe during the last Ice Age faced challenges no tougher than those confronted by the modern Inuit, or Eskimos. ... [..] the short lifespans of Neanderthals and evidence of arthritis in their skeletons suggests that their lives were extremely difficult. ... Guatelli-Steinberg has spent the last decade investigating tiny defects -- linear enamel hypoplasia -- in tooth enamel from primates, modern and early humans. These defects serve as markers of periods during early childhood when food was scarce and nutrition was low. These tiny horizontal lines and grooves in tooth enamel form when the body faces either a systemic illness or a severely deficient diet. In essence, they are reminders of times when the body's normal process of forming tooth enamel during childhood simply shut down for a period of time. "Looking at these fossilized teeth, you can easily see these defects that showed Neanderthals periodically struggled nutritionally," she said. "But I wanted to know if that struggle was any harder than that of more modern humans." ... "The evidence shows that Neanderthals were no worse off than the Inuit who lived in equally harsh environmental conditions," she said, despite the fact that the Inuit use more advanced technology. "It is somewhat startling that Neanderthals weren't suffering as badly as people had thought, relative to a modern human group (the Inuits)." ...' http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/neander.htm The Neanderthals ..... ?? The Inuit don't fare very well either.. 'American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 27, 916-925, 1974 Bone mineral content of North Alaskan Eskimos Richard B. Mazess Ph.D.1 and Warren Mather B.S.1 1 From the Bone Mineral Laboratory, Department of Radiology (Medical Physics), University of Wisconsin Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 Direct photon absorptiometry was used to measure the bone mineral content of forearm bones in Eskimo natives of the north coast of Alaska. The sample consisted of 217 children, 89 adults, and 107 elderly (over 50 years). Eskimo children had a lower bone mineral content than United States whites by 5 to 10% but this was consistent with their smaller body and bone size. Young Eskimo adults (20 to 39 years) of both sexes were similar to whites, but after age 40 the Eskimos of both sexes had a deficit of from 10 to 15% relative to white standards. Aging bone loss, which occurs in many populations, has an earlier onset and greater intensity in the Eskimos. Nutritional factors of high protein, high nitrogen, high phosphorus, and low calcium intakes may be implicated. http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/abstract/27/9/916 'First Nations people and Inuit have higher rates of injury, suicide and diabetes.' http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/index_e.html 'Combined, circulatory diseases (23% of all deaths) and injury (22%) account for nearly half of all mortality among First Nations. In Canada, circulatory diseases account for 37% of all deaths, followed by cancer (27%). ... For First Nations aged 45 years and older, circulatory disease was the most common cause of death. ...' http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/pub..._profil_e.html 'Ethnographic parallels with modern hunter-gatherer communities have been taken to show that the colder the climate, the greater the reliance on meat. There are sound biological and economic reasons for this, not least in the ready availability of large amounts of fat in arctic mammals. From this, it has been deduced that the humans of the glacial periods were primarily hunters, while plant foods were more important during the interglacials. ' http://www.phancocks.pwp.blueyonder..../devensian.htm 'Anthropologically speaking, humans were high consumers of calcium until the onset of the Agricultural Age, 10,000 years ago. Current calcium intake is one-quarter to one-third that of our evolutionary diet and, if we are genetically identical to the Late Paleolithic Homo sapiens, we may be consuming a calcium-deficient diet our bodies cannot adjust to by physiologic mechanisms. The anthropological approach says, with the exception of a few small changes related to genetic blood diseases, that humans are basically identical biologically and medically to the hunter-gatherers of the late Paleolithic Era.17 During this period, calcium content of the diet was much higher than it is currently. Depending on the ratio of animal to plant foods, calcium intake could have exceeded 2000 mg per day.17 Calcium was largely derived from wild plants, which had a very high calcium content; animal protein played a small role, and the use of dairy products did not come into play until the Agricultural Age 10,000 years ago. Compared to the current intake of approximately 500 mg per day for women age 20 and over in the United States,18 hunter-gatherers had a significantly higher calcium intake and apparently much stronger bones. As late as 12,000 years ago, Stone Age hunters had an average of 17-percent more bone density (as measured by humeral cortical thickness). Bone density also appeared to be stable over time with an apparent absence of osteoporosis.17 High levels of calcium excretion via renal losses are seen with both high salt and high protein diets, in each case at levels common in the United States.10,11 .. The only hunter-gatherers that seemed to fall prey to bone loss were the aboriginal Inuit (Eskimos). Although their physical activity level was high, their osteoporosis incidence exceeded even present-day levels in the United States. The Inuit diet was high in phosphorus and protein and low in calcium.20 ...' http://www.thorne.com/altmedrev/full...alcium4-2.html so do I :-) 'Campbell TC, Junshi C. Diet and chronic degenerative diseases: perspectives from China. Am J Clin Nutr 1994 May;59(5 Suppl): 1153S-1161S. A comprehensive ecologic survey of dietary, life-style, and mortality characteristics of 65 counties in rural China showed that diets are substantially richer in foods of plant origin when compared with diets consumed in the more industrialized, Western societies. Mean intakes of animal protein (about one-tenth of the mean intake in the United States as energy percent), total fat (14.5% of energy), and dietary fiber (33.3 g/d) reflected a substantial preference for foods of plant origin. Mean plasma cholesterol concentration, at approximately 3.23-3.49 mmol/L, corresponds to this dietary life-style. The principal hypothesis under investigation in this paper is that chronic degenerative diseases are prevented by an aggregate effect of nutrients and nutrient-intake amounts that are commonly supplied by foods of plant origin. The breadth and consistency of evidence for this hypothesis was investigated with multiple intake- biomarker-disease associations, which were appropriately adjusted. There appears to be no threshold of plant-food enrichment or minimization of fat intake beyond which further disease prevention does not occur. These findings suggest that even small intakes of foods of animal origin are associated with significant increases in plasma cholesterol concentrations, which are associated, in turn, with significant increases in chronic degenerative disease mortality rates. http://www.diseaseproof.com/archives...in-health.html |
#14
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"Rodney Long" wrote in message ...
pearl wrote: This SHOT DOWN ALL OTHER "THEORIES" BEFORE HER. Blowing out all of the earlier theories. She had the "real" facts, and had them on film, from the hunting, to the eating of meat. She even recorded at least one case of cannibalisms . Why don't you check that out, I've even seen the videos of it. Everyone was surprised by these facts. Gombe National Park is a limited area, and competition is high. '..The park is made up of narrow mountain strip of land about 16 kilometers long and 5 kilometers wide on the shore of Lake Tanganyika. From the lake shore steep slopes rises up to form the Rift Valley's escapement, which is covered by the dense forest. .. The dominating vegetation in this park include the open deciduous woodland on the upper slopes, gallery forests on the valleys and lower slopes. This type of vegetation is unique in Tanzania and has been supporting a large number of Chimpanzee, Baboons, and a large number of bird species. Other species seen here are colobus, blue and red tail monkeys. I was not going to even mention Baboons, meat eating is an accepted practice for them. Their habitat has been described as flat, semi-arid savannah with occasional trees or woodland, with highly seasonal rainfall. Not a place where succulent fruits could be expected to be abundant. So, yet, .. "their diet emphasizes roots, tubers, grass seeds and fruits." http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~bramblet/ant301/eight.html As you mention baboons.... 'No Time for Bullies: Baboons Retool Their Culture By NATALIE ANGIER Published: April 13, 2004 Sometimes it takes the great Dustbuster of fate to clear the room of bullies and bad habits. Freak cyclones helped destroy Kublai Khan's brutal Mongolian empire, for example, while the Black Death of the 14th century capsized the medieval theocracy and gave the Renaissance a chance to shine. Among a troop of savanna baboons in Kenya, a terrible outbreak of tuberculosis 20 years ago selectively killed off the biggest, nastiest and most despotic males, setting the stage for a social and behavioral transformation unlike any seen in this notoriously truculent primate. In a study appearing today in the journal PloS Biology (online at www.plosbiology.org), researchers describe the drastic temperamental and tonal shift that occurred in a troop of 62 baboons when its most belligerent members vanished from the scene. The victims were all dominant adult males that had been strong and snarly enough to fight with a neighboring baboon troop over the spoils at a tourist lodge garbage dump, and were exposed there to meat tainted with bovine tuberculosis, which soon killed them. Left behind in the troop, designated the Forest Troop, were the 50 percent of males that had been too subordinate to try dump brawling, as well as all the females and their young. With that change in demographics came a cultural swing toward pacifism, a relaxing of the usually parlous baboon hierarchy, and a willingness to use affection and mutual grooming rather than threats, swipes and bites to foster a patriotic spirit. Remarkably, the Forest Troop has maintained its genial style over two decades, even though the male survivors of the epidemic have since died or disappeared and been replaced by males from the outside. (As is the case for most primates, baboon females spend their lives in their natal home, while the males leave at puberty to seek their fortunes elsewhere.) The persistence of communal comity suggests that the resident baboons must somehow be instructing the immigrants in the unusual customs of the tribe. "We don't yet understand the mechanism of transmittal," said Dr. Robert M. Sapolsky, a professor of biology and neurology at Stanford, "but the jerky new guys are obviously learning, `We don't do things like that around here.'" Dr. Sapolsky wrote the report with his colleague and wife, Dr. Lisa J. Share. Dr. Sapolsky, who is renowned for his study of the physiology of stress, said that the Forest Troop baboons probably felt as good as they acted. Hormone samples from the monkeys showed far less evidence of stress in even the lowest-ranking individuals, when contrasted with baboons living in more rancorous societies. The researchers were able to compare the behavior and physiology of the contemporary Forest Troop primates to two control groups: a similar-size baboon congregation living nearby, called the Talek Troop, and the Forest Troop itself from 1979 through 1982, the era that might be called Before Alpha Die-off, or B.A.D. "It's a really fine, thorough piece of work, with the sort of methodology and lucky data sets that you can only get from doing long-term field research," said Dr. Duane Quiatt, a primatologist at the University of Colorado at Denver and a co-author with Vernon Reynolds of the 1993 book "Primate Behaviour: Information, Social Knowledge and the Evolution of Culture." The new work vividly demonstrates that, Putumayo records notwithstanding, humans hold no patent on multiculturalism. As a growing body of research indicates, many social animals learn from one another and cultivate regional variants in skills, conventions and fashions. Some chimpanzees crack open their nuts with a stone hammer on a stone anvil; others prefer wood hammers on wood anvils. The chimpanzees of the Tai forest rain-dance; those of the Gombe tickle themselves. Dr. Jane Goodall reported a fad in one chimpanzee group: a young female started wiggling her hands, and before long, every teen chimp was doing likewise. (Page 2 of 2) But in the baboon study, the culture being conveyed is less a specific behavior or skill than a global code of conduct. "You can more accurately describe it as the social ethos of group," said Dr. Andrew Whiten, a professor of evolutionary and developmental psychology at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland who has studied chimpanzee culture. "It's an attitude that's being transmitted." The report also offers real-world proof of a principle first demonstrated in captive populations of monkeys: that with the right upbringing, diplomacy is infectious. Dr. Frans B. M. de Waal, the director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center of Emory University in Atlanta, has shown that if the normally pugilistic rhesus monkeys are reared with the more conciliatory stumptailed monkeys, the rhesus monkeys learn the value of tolerance, peacemaking and mutual hip-hugging. Dr. de Waal, who wrote an essay to accompany the new baboon study, said in a telephone interview, "The good news for humans is that it looks like peaceful conditions, once established, can be maintained," he said. "And if baboons can do it," he said, "why not us? The bad news is that you might have to first knock out all the most aggressive males to get there." Jerkiness or worse certainly seems to be a job description for ordinary male baboons. The average young male, after wheedling his way into a new troop at around age 7, spends his prime years seeking to fang his way up the hierarchy; and once he's gained some status, he devotes many a leisure hour to whimsical displays of power at scant personal cost. He harasses and attacks females, which weigh half his hundred pounds and lack his thumb-thick canines, or he terrorizes the low-ranking males he knows cannot retaliate. Dr. Barbara Smuts, a primatologist at the University of Michigan who wrote the 1985 book "Sex and Friendship in Baboons," said that the females in the troop she studied received a serious bite from a male annually, maybe losing a strip of flesh or part of an ear in the process. As they age and lose their strength, however, males may calm down and adopt a new approach to group living, affiliating with females so devotedly that they keep their reproductive opportunities going even as their ranking in the male hierarchy plunges. For their part, female baboons, which live up to 25 years - compared with the male's 18 - inherit their rank in the gynocracy from their mothers and so spend less time fighting for dominance. They do, however, readily battle females from outside the fold, for they, not the males, are the keepers of turf and dynasty. The new-fashioned Forest Troop is no United Nations, or even the average frat house. Its citizens remain highly aggressive and argumentative, and the males still obsess over hierarchy. "We're talking about baboons here," said Dr. Sapolsky. What most distinguishes this congregation from others is that the males resist taking out their bad moods on females and underlings. When a dominant male wants to pick a fight, he finds someone his own size and rank. As a result, a greater percentage of male-male conflicts in the Forest Troop occur between closely ranked individuals than is seen in the control populations, where the bullies seek easier pickings. Moreover, Forest Troop males of all ranks spend more time grooming and being groomed, and just generally huddling close to troop mates, than do their counterpart males in the study. Interestingly, the male faces in the Forest Troop may have changed over time, but the relative numbers have not. Ever since the tuberculosis epidemic killed half the adult males, the ratio has remained skewed, with twice as many females as males. Yet the researchers have demonstrated that the troop's sexual complexion alone cannot explain its character. Examining other troops with a similar preponderance of females, the Stanford scientists saw no evidence of the Forest Troop's relative amity. Dr. Sapolsky has no idea how long the good times will last. "I confess I'm rooting for the troop to stay like this forever, but I worry about how vulnerable they may be," he said. "All it would take is two or three jerky adolescent males entering at the same time to tilt the balance and destroy the culture." http://tinyurl.com/3hn4m |
#15
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From: "pearl"
snip Total bullsh!t. Denying the fact that hominids are omnivorous. It was the extraction of bone marrow that helped early hominids evolve. I don't care if anyone is vegetarian or vegan. It do care when extremists want everyone to follow their POV. This is the same as religious extremism. -- Dave http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html http://www.ik-cs.com/got-a-virus.htm |
#16
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"David H. Lipman" wrote in message news:T096h.4761$5P2.4751@trnddc02...
From: "pearl" snip Total bullsh!t. Denying the fact that hominids are omnivorous. No. Demonstrating beyond any reasonable doubt, that humans are not naturally carnivorous omnivores, omnivorous as you are. It was the extraction of bone marrow that helped early hominids evolve. Going by that 'logic', carnivores should be way smarter than us. You are wrong. I suggest you try to get over it pretty smartish. I don't care if anyone is vegetarian or vegan. It do care when extremists want everyone to follow their POV. This is the same as religious extremism. You are in denial. That is the hallmark indication of addiction. ! -- Dave http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html http://www.ik-cs.com/got-a-virus.htm |
#17
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pearl wrote:
'Brown says that pushing the emergence of Homo sapiens from about 160,000 years ago back to about 195,000 years ago "is significant because the cultural aspects of humanity in most cases appear much later in the record - only 50,000 years ago - which would mean 150,000 years of Homo sapiens without cultural stuff, such as evidence of eating fish, of harpoons, anything to do with music (flutes and that sort of thing), needles, even tools. This stuff all comes in very late, except for stone knife blades, which appeared between 50,000 and 200,000 years ago, depending on whom you believe." Fleagle adds: "There is a huge debate in the archeological literature regarding the first appearance of modern aspects of behavior such as bone carving for religious reasons, or tools (harpoons and things), ornamentation (bead jewelry and such), drawn images, arrowheads. They only appear as a coherent package about 50,000 years ago, and the first modern humans that left Africa between 50,000 and 40,000 years ago seem to have had the full set. As modern human anatomy is documented at earlier and earlier sites, it becomes evident that there was a great time gap between the appearance of the modern skeleton and 'modern behavior.'" So this proves that man's "intelligence" did not mature (the making of tools, not just killing and butchering tools) until he started eating meat. This also is a good theory why vegetarians today, are loosing their cognitive thinking ability, they are also actually loosing their "basic survival" instinks .. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0223122209.htm so was Neanderthal Man, they both ate meat and veggies,, "COLUMBUS, Ohio - The bands of ancient Neanderthals that struggled throughout Europe during the last Ice Age faced challenges no tougher than those confronted by the modern Inuit, or Eskimos. .. [..] the short lifespans of Neanderthals and evidence of arthritis in their skeletons suggests that their lives were extremely difficult. .. Guatelli-Steinberg has spent the last decade investigating tiny defects -- linear enamel hypoplasia -- in tooth enamel from primates, modern and early humans. These defects serve as markers of periods during early childhood when food was scarce and nutrition was low. These tiny horizontal lines and grooves in tooth enamel form when the body faces either a systemic illness or a severely deficient diet. In essence, they are reminders of times when the body's normal process of forming tooth enamel during childhood simply shut down for a period of time. "Looking at these fossilized teeth, you can easily see these defects that showed Neanderthals periodically struggled nutritionally," she said. "But I wanted to know if that struggle was any harder than that of more modern humans." .. "The evidence shows that Neanderthals were no worse off than the Inuit who lived in equally harsh environmental conditions," she said, despite the fact that the Inuit use more advanced technology. "It is somewhat startling that Neanderthals weren't suffering as badly as people had thought, relative to a modern human group (the Inuits)." And in both cases their "primary" source of food, if not their total source, was MEAT ! ..' http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/neander.htm The Neanderthals ..... ?? The Inuit don't fare very well either.. 'American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 27, 916-925, 1974 Bone mineral content of North Alaskan Eskimos Richard B. Mazess Ph.D.1 and Warren Mather B.S.1 1 From the Bone Mineral Laboratory, Department of Radiology (Medical Physics), University of Wisconsin Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 Direct photon absorptiometry was used to measure the bone mineral content of forearm bones in Eskimo natives of the north coast of Alaska. The sample consisted of 217 children, 89 adults, and 107 elderly (over 50 years). Eskimo children had a lower bone mineral content than United States whites by 5 to 10% but this was consistent with their smaller body and bone size. Young Eskimo adults (20 to 39 years) of both sexes were similar to whites, but after age 40 the Eskimos of both sexes had a deficit of from 10 to 15% relative to white standards. Aging bone loss, which occurs in many populations, has an earlier onset and greater intensity in the Eskimos. Nutritional factors of high protein, high nitrogen, high phosphorus, and low calcium intakes may be implicated. http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/abstract/27/9/916 'First Nations people and Inuit have higher rates of injury, suicide and diabetes.' http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/index_e.html 'Combined, circulatory diseases (23% of all deaths) and injury (22%) account for nearly half of all mortality among First Nations. In Canada, circulatory diseases account for 37% of all deaths, followed by cancer (27%). .. For First Nations aged 45 years and older, circulatory disease was the most common cause of death. ..' http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/pub..._profil_e.html 'Ethnographic parallels with modern hunter-gatherer communities have been taken to show that the colder the climate, the greater the reliance on meat. There are sound biological and economic reasons for this, not least in the ready availability of large amounts of fat in arctic mammals. From this, it has been deduced that the humans of the glacial periods were primarily hunters, while plant foods were more important during the interglacials. ' http://www.phancocks.pwp.blueyonder..../devensian.htm 'Anthropologically speaking, humans were high consumers of calcium until the onset of the Agricultural Age, 10,000 years ago. Current calcium intake is one-quarter to one-third that of our evolutionary diet and, if we are genetically identical to the Late Paleolithic Homo sapiens, we may be consuming a calcium-deficient diet our bodies cannot adjust to by physiologic mechanisms. The anthropological approach says, with the exception of a few small changes related to genetic blood diseases, that humans are basically identical biologically and medically to the hunter-gatherers of the late Paleolithic Era.17 During this period, calcium content of the diet was much higher than it is currently. Depending on the ratio of animal to plant foods, calcium intake could have exceeded 2000 mg per day.17 Calcium was largely derived from wild plants, which had a very high calcium content; animal protein played a small role, and the use of dairy products did not come into play until the Agricultural Age 10,000 years ago. Compared to the current intake of approximately 500 mg per day for women age 20 and over in the United States,18 hunter-gatherers had a significantly higher calcium intake and apparently much stronger bones. As late as 12,000 years ago, Stone Age hunters had an average of 17-percent more bone density (as measured by humeral cortical thickness). Bone density also appeared to be stable over time with an apparent absence of osteoporosis.17 High levels of calcium excretion via renal losses are seen with both high salt and high protein diets, in each case at levels common in the United States.10,11 .. The only hunter-gatherers that seemed to fall prey to bone loss were the aboriginal Inuit (Eskimos). Although their physical activity level was high, their osteoporosis incidence exceeded even present-day levels in the United States. The Inuit diet was high in phosphorus and protein and low in calcium.20 ..' http://www.thorne.com/altmedrev/full...alcium4-2.html so do I :-) 'Campbell TC, Junshi C. Diet and chronic degenerative diseases: perspectives from China. Am J Clin Nutr 1994 May;59(5 Suppl): 1153S-1161S. A comprehensive ecologic survey of dietary, life-style, and mortality characteristics of 65 counties in rural China showed that diets are substantially richer in foods of plant origin when compared with diets consumed in the more industrialized, Western societies. Mean intakes of animal protein (about one-tenth of the mean intake in the United States as energy percent), total fat (14.5% of energy), and dietary fiber (33.3 g/d) reflected a substantial preference for foods of plant origin. Mean plasma cholesterol concentration, at approximately 3.23-3.49 mmol/L, corresponds to this dietary life-style. The principal hypothesis under investigation in this paper is that chronic degenerative diseases are prevented by an aggregate effect of nutrients and nutrient-intake amounts that are commonly supplied by foods of plant origin. The breadth and consistency of evidence for this hypothesis was investigated with multiple intake- biomarker-disease associations, which were appropriately adjusted. There appears to be no threshold of plant-food enrichment or minimization of fat intake beyond which further disease prevention does not occur. These findings suggest that even small intakes of foods of animal origin are associated with significant increases in plasma cholesterol concentrations, which are associated, in turn, with significant increases in chronic degenerative disease mortality rates. I eat MEAT three times a day, I'm 53 years old, my cholesterol level,,,,,, ""91"" ,,,,, which is lower than most vegetarians. There is a whole lot more involved in cholesterol levels than just eating, or not eating meat Every morning I have two eggs and four strips of bacon, for lunch their will be either ground beef or chicken, for dinner, Steak, pork, chicken or fish , with about 40 venison meals through the year. I also consume at least 1/2 lb of "real" butter a week I have ZERO heart disease, but I still had them do an echo cardiogram at my last physical, it was perfect. My Doctor says that all this is impossible, because of my diet. No, Not really, I eat huge quantities of powdered GARLIC, I eat it on, and in everything. I have for my whole life. I have lost 115 lbs over the last two years, and kept it off, what I stopped eating was bread and sugar or anything made with processed flour, and processed sugar,, those are the two things that will kill you, not meat -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread, Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#18
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"Rodney Long" wrote in message ...
pearl wrote: restore "The implication is that older hominids practised nut-cracking like the chimps." Could be true,, but "Modern" man was a hunter, and killer from the get go, How? end restore 'Brown says that pushing the emergence of Homo sapiens from about 160,000 years ago back to about 195,000 years ago "is significant because the cultural aspects of humanity in most cases appear much later in the record - only 50,000 years ago - which would mean 150,000 years of Homo sapiens without cultural stuff, such as evidence of eating fish, of harpoons, anything to do with music (flutes and that sort of thing), needles, even tools. This stuff all comes in very late, except for stone knife blades, which appeared between 50,000 and 200,000 years ago, depending on whom you believe." Fleagle adds: "There is a huge debate in the archeological literature regarding the first appearance of modern aspects of behavior such as bone carving for religious reasons, or tools (harpoons and things), ornamentation (bead jewelry and such), drawn images, arrowheads. They only appear as a coherent package about 50,000 years ago, and the first modern humans that left Africa between 50,000 and 40,000 years ago seem to have had the full set. As modern human anatomy is documented at earlier and earlier sites, it becomes evident that there was a great time gap between the appearance of the modern skeleton and 'modern behavior.'" So this proves that man's "intelligence" did not mature (the making of tools, not just killing and butchering tools) until he started eating meat. This also is a good theory why vegetarians today, are loosing their cognitive thinking ability, they are also actually loosing their "basic survival" instinks Evolution happens over very, very long periods of time, not overnight. A history of millions of years of progressive adaptation and learning brought primates to hominids to man to the point where more complex tasks could be devised and carried out, and necessity in a cold climate presented new challenges which drove technological advance - in the making of tools and weapons for *needed* food in the form of meat, warm clothing *needed* to survive in colder conditions, and houses. It was not meat and hunting per se that brought about technological advance, - environmental conditions demanded change in the culture. And, when stuck indoors with others, rather than foraging in loose groups in the big outdoors, you'll understand that there is a lot more time to sit and communicate ... stories and legends are born.. making carvings, paintings, and so on ... there's time to imagine and visualize .. .. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0223122209.htm so was Neanderthal Man, they both ate meat and veggies,, "COLUMBUS, Ohio - The bands of ancient Neanderthals that struggled throughout Europe during the last Ice Age faced challenges no tougher than those confronted by the modern Inuit, or Eskimos. .. [..] the short lifespans of Neanderthals and evidence of arthritis in their skeletons suggests that their lives were extremely difficult. .. Guatelli-Steinberg has spent the last decade investigating tiny defects -- linear enamel hypoplasia -- in tooth enamel from primates, modern and early humans. These defects serve as markers of periods during early childhood when food was scarce and nutrition was low. These tiny horizontal lines and grooves in tooth enamel form when the body faces either a systemic illness or a severely deficient diet. In essence, they are reminders of times when the body's normal process of forming tooth enamel during childhood simply shut down for a period of time. "Looking at these fossilized teeth, you can easily see these defects that showed Neanderthals periodically struggled nutritionally," she said. "But I wanted to know if that struggle was any harder than that of more modern humans." .. "The evidence shows that Neanderthals were no worse off than the Inuit who lived in equally harsh environmental conditions," she said, despite the fact that the Inuit use more advanced technology. "It is somewhat startling that Neanderthals weren't suffering as badly as people had thought, relative to a modern human group (the Inuits)." And in both cases their "primary" source of food, if not their total source, was MEAT ! Yes. ..' http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/neander.htm The Neanderthals ..... ?? The Inuit don't fare very well either.. 'American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 27, 916-925, 1974 Bone mineral content of North Alaskan Eskimos Richard B. Mazess Ph.D.1 and Warren Mather B.S.1 1 From the Bone Mineral Laboratory, Department of Radiology (Medical Physics), University of Wisconsin Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 Direct photon absorptiometry was used to measure the bone mineral content of forearm bones in Eskimo natives of the north coast of Alaska. The sample consisted of 217 children, 89 adults, and 107 elderly (over 50 years). Eskimo children had a lower bone mineral content than United States whites by 5 to 10% but this was consistent with their smaller body and bone size. Young Eskimo adults (20 to 39 years) of both sexes were similar to whites, but after age 40 the Eskimos of both sexes had a deficit of from 10 to 15% relative to white standards. Aging bone loss, which occurs in many populations, has an earlier onset and greater intensity in the Eskimos. Nutritional factors of high protein, high nitrogen, high phosphorus, and low calcium intakes may be implicated. http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/abstract/27/9/916 'First Nations people and Inuit have higher rates of injury, suicide and diabetes.' http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/index_e.html 'Combined, circulatory diseases (23% of all deaths) and injury (22%) account for nearly half of all mortality among First Nations. In Canada, circulatory diseases account for 37% of all deaths, followed by cancer (27%). .. For First Nations aged 45 years and older, circulatory disease was the most common cause of death. ..' http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/pub..._profil_e.html 'Ethnographic parallels with modern hunter-gatherer communities have been taken to show that the colder the climate, the greater the reliance on meat. There are sound biological and economic reasons for this, not least in the ready availability of large amounts of fat in arctic mammals. From this, it has been deduced that the humans of the glacial periods were primarily hunters, while plant foods were more important during the interglacials. ' http://www.phancocks.pwp.blueyonder..../devensian.htm 'Anthropologically speaking, humans were high consumers of calcium until the onset of the Agricultural Age, 10,000 years ago. Current calcium intake is one-quarter to one-third that of our evolutionary diet and, if we are genetically identical to the Late Paleolithic Homo sapiens, we may be consuming a calcium-deficient diet our bodies cannot adjust to by physiologic mechanisms. The anthropological approach says, with the exception of a few small changes related to genetic blood diseases, that humans are basically identical biologically and medically to the hunter-gatherers of the late Paleolithic Era.17 During this period, calcium content of the diet was much higher than it is currently. Depending on the ratio of animal to plant foods, calcium intake could have exceeded 2000 mg per day.17 Calcium was largely derived from wild plants, which had a very high calcium content; animal protein played a small role, and the use of dairy products did not come into play until the Agricultural Age 10,000 years ago. Compared to the current intake of approximately 500 mg per day for women age 20 and over in the United States,18 hunter-gatherers had a significantly higher calcium intake and apparently much stronger bones. As late as 12,000 years ago, Stone Age hunters had an average of 17-percent more bone density (as measured by humeral cortical thickness). Bone density also appeared to be stable over time with an apparent absence of osteoporosis.17 High levels of calcium excretion via renal losses are seen with both high salt and high protein diets, in each case at levels common in the United States.10,11 .. The only hunter-gatherers that seemed to fall prey to bone loss were the aboriginal Inuit (Eskimos). Although their physical activity level was high, their osteoporosis incidence exceeded even present-day levels in the United States. The Inuit diet was high in phosphorus and protein and low in calcium.20 ..' http://www.thorne.com/altmedrev/full...alcium4-2.html so do I :-) 'Campbell TC, Junshi C. Diet and chronic degenerative diseases: perspectives from China. Am J Clin Nutr 1994 May;59(5 Suppl): 1153S-1161S. A comprehensive ecologic survey of dietary, life-style, and mortality characteristics of 65 counties in rural China showed that diets are substantially richer in foods of plant origin when compared with diets consumed in the more industrialized, Western societies. Mean intakes of animal protein (about one-tenth of the mean intake in the United States as energy percent), total fat (14.5% of energy), and dietary fiber (33.3 g/d) reflected a substantial preference for foods of plant origin. Mean plasma cholesterol concentration, at approximately 3.23-3.49 mmol/L, corresponds to this dietary life-style. The principal hypothesis under investigation in this paper is that chronic degenerative diseases are prevented by an aggregate effect of nutrients and nutrient-intake amounts that are commonly supplied by foods of plant origin. The breadth and consistency of evidence for this hypothesis was investigated with multiple intake- biomarker-disease associations, which were appropriately adjusted. There appears to be no threshold of plant-food enrichment or minimization of fat intake beyond which further disease prevention does not occur. These findings suggest that even small intakes of foods of animal origin are associated with significant increases in plasma cholesterol concentrations, which are associated, in turn, with significant increases in chronic degenerative disease mortality rates. I eat MEAT three times a day, I'm 53 years old, my cholesterol level,,,,,, ""91"" ,,,,, which is lower than most vegetarians. There is a whole lot more involved in cholesterol levels than just eating, or not eating meat Every morning I have two eggs and four strips of bacon, for lunch their will be either ground beef or chicken, for dinner, Steak, pork, chicken or fish , with about 40 venison meals through the year. I also consume at least 1/2 lb of "real" butter a week I have ZERO heart disease, but I still had them do an echo cardiogram at my last physical, it was perfect. My Doctor says that all this is impossible, because of my diet. No, Not really, I eat huge quantities of powdered GARLIC, I eat it on, and in everything. I have for my whole life. I have lost 115 lbs over the last two years, and kept it off, what I stopped eating was bread and sugar or anything made with processed flour, and processed sugar,, those are the two things that will kill you, not meat Anecdotal evidence. Hmm to that. Sorry. 'Am J Clin Nutr 1999 Sep;70(3 Suppl):532S-538S Associations between diet and cancer, ischemic heart disease, and all-cause mortality in non-Hispanic white California Seventh-day Adventists. Fraser GE. Center for Health Research and the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Loma Linda University, CA USA. Results associating diet with chronic disease in a cohort of 34192 California Seventh-day Adventists are summarized. Most Seventh-day Adventists do not smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol, and there is a wide range of dietary exposures within the population. About 50% of those studied ate meat products 1 time/wk or not at all, and vegetarians consumed more tomatoes, legumes, nuts, and fruit, but less coffee, doughnuts, and eggs than did nonvegetarians. Multivariate analyses showed significant associations between beef consumption and fatal ischemic heart disease (IHD) in men [relative risk (RR) = 2.31 for subjects who ate beef or =3 times/wk compared with vegetarians], significant protective associations between nut consumption and fatal and nonfatal IHD in both sexes (RR approximately 0.5 for subjects who ate nuts or =5 times/wk compared with those who ate nuts 1 time/wk), and reduced risk of IHD in subjects preferring whole-grain to white bread. The lifetime risk of IHD was reduced by approximately 31% in those who consumed nuts frequently and by 37% in male vegetarians compared with nonvegetarians. Cancers of the colon and prostate were significantly more likely in nonvegetarians (RR of 1.88 and 1.54, respectively), and frequent beef consumers also had higher risk of bladder cancer. Intake of legumes was negatively associated with risk of colon cancer in nonvegetarians and risk of pancreatic cancer. Higher consumption of all fruit or dried fruit was associated with lower risks of lung, prostate, and pancreatic cancers. Cross-sectional data suggest vegetarian Seventh-day Adventists have lower risks of diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and arthritis than nonvegetarians. Thus, among Seventh-day Adventists, vegetarians are healthier than nonvegetarians but this cannot be ascribed only to the absence of meat. - PMID: 10479227' |
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David H. Lipman wrote:
From: "pearl" snip Total bullsh!t. Denying the fact that hominids are omnivorous. It was the extraction of bone marrow that helped early hominids evolve. I don't care if anyone is vegetarian or vegan. It do care when extremists want everyone to follow their POV. This is the same as religious extremism. You can't reason with a vegetarian, they have lost the protein in their diet, that allows their brains to function properly. Prime example, they complain about people killing animals, yet they can no longer, see animals killing animals, animals even torturing other animals, just watch a house cat play with a mouse, or killer whales tossing "injured" baby seals in the air for hours, before finally eating them. Animals kill more animals, than humans do. It's the way nature works, and we humans are part of nature. I hunt, and I fish, I can't stand to see a creature suffer needlessly, I dispatch them as quickly as possible. That deer I kill, I saved another 2 deer from starving to death, slowly, during the winter, we must control their numbers, or starvation , and disease will make them suffer horribly. There is documented evidence of this, when Pennsylvania banned deer hunting for ten years, they lost tens of thousands of deer to starvation and disease each year, tell me these deer did not suffer, needlessly !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Your vegetarians can not see these facts any longer, they loose that part or reasoning in their brains,, nothing we meat eaters can do to change their thinking, until they have a couple of hamburgers. They suffer from a chemical imbalance of the brain, and you can't fix it with the antidepressants most of them take. It takes Meat, to solve that problem. How do I know that,, well my daughter went though that phase a few years back, she decided to stop eating meat, within 6 months she was condemning me for eating meat, and hunting, and fishing. One day my wife started slipping a bit of bacon fat into her veggies, a week later, she started finely grinding a little meat into them, in a month she was normal again, and started hunting, and fishing again, and eating meat daily. She now is a normal wife, and mother, with her own son, and feeds him meat. There is hope for these veg'es, They can be turned back to the force, from the dark side, all someone has to do is slip a little hidden meat into their diet, then those neurons that have not been fed, start working again, next thing you know, they will be out with a shotgun, duck hunting :-) -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread, Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
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On Tue, 14 Nov 2006 08:07:52 -0600, Rodney Long
wrote: David H. Lipman wrote: From: "pearl" snip Total bullsh!t. Denying the fact that hominids are omnivorous. It was the extraction of bone marrow that helped early hominids evolve. I don't care if anyone is vegetarian or vegan. It do care when extremists want everyone to follow their POV. This is the same as religious extremism. You can't reason with a vegetarian, they have lost the protein in their diet, that allows their brains to function properly. What's your excuse then? |
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