Timeline of dietary shifts in the human line of evolution |
65,000,000 to 50,000,000 B.C.: The first primates, resembling today's mouse lemurs, bush-
50,000,000 to 30,000,000 B.C.: A gradual shift in diet for these primates to mostly frugivorous in the middle of this period to mostly herbivorous towards the end of it, but with considerable variance between specific primate species as to lesser items in the diet, such as insects, meat, and other plant foods.[9]
30,000,000 to 10,000,000 B.C.: Fairly stable persistence of above dietary pattern.[10]
Approx. 10,000,000 to 7,000,000 B.C.: Last common primate ancestor of both humans and the modern ape family.[11]
Approx. 7,000,000 to 5,000,000 B.C.: After the end of the previous period, a fork occurs branching into separate primate lines, including humans.[12] The most recent DNA evidence shows that humans are closely related to both gorillas and chimpanzees, but most closely to the chimp.[13] Most paleoanthropologists believe that after the split, flesh foods began to assume a greater role in the human side of the primate family at this time.[14]
Approx. 4,500,000 B.C.: First known hominid (proto-
Approx. 3,700,000 B.C.: First fully upright bipedal hominid, Australopithecus afarensis (meaning "southern ape," for the initial discovery in southern Africa), about 4 feet tall, first known popularly from the famous "Lucy" skeleton.[16]
3,000,000 to 2,000,000 B.C.: Australopithecus line diverges into sub-
There is still some debate as to which Australopithecus lineage modern humans ultimately descended from, but recent evidence based on strontium/calcium ratios in bone, plus teeth microwear studies, show that whatever the lineage, some meat was eaten in addition to the plant foods and fruits which were the staples.[20]
2,300,000 to 1,500,000 B.C.: Appearance of the first "true humans" (signified by the genus Homo), known as Homo habilis ("handy man")--
The main controversy about this time period by paleoanthropologists is not whether Homo habilis consumed flesh (which is well established) but whether the flesh they consumed was primarily obtained by scavenging kills made by other predators or by hunting.[24] (The latter would indicate a more developed culture, the former a more primitive one.) While meat was becoming a more important part of the diet at this time, based on the fact that the diet of modern hunter-
1,700,000 to 230,000 B.C.: Evolution of Homo habilis into the "erectines,"* a range of human species often collectively referred to as Homo erectus, after the most well-
The erectines were the first human ancestor to control and use fire. It is thought that perhaps because of this, but more importantly because of other converging factors--
For whatever reasons, it was also around this time (dated to approx. 700,000 years ago) that a significant increase in large land animals occurred in Europe (elephants, hoofed animals, hippopotamuses, and predators of the big-cat family) as these animals spread from their African home. It is unlikely to have been an accident that the spread of the erectines to the European and Asian continent during and after this timeframe coincides with this increase in game as well, as they probably followed them.[29]
Because of the considerably harsher conditions and seasonal variation in food supply, hunting became more important to bridge the seasonal gaps, as well as the ability to store nonperishable items such as nuts, bulbs, and tubers for the winter when the edible plants withered in the autumn. All of these factors, along with clothing (and also perhaps fire), helped enable colonization of the less hospitable environment. There were also physical changes in response to the colder and darker areas that were inhabited, such as the development of lighter skin color that allowed the sun to penetrate the skin and produce vitamin D, as well as the adaptation of the fat layer and sweat glands to the new climate.*[30]
Erectus finds from northern China 400,000 years ago have indicated an omnivorous diet of meats, wild fruit and berries (including hackberries), plus shoots and tubers, and various other animal foods such as birds and their eggs, insects, reptiles, rats, and large mammals.[31]
500,000 to 200,000 B.C.: Archaic Homo sapiens (our immediate predecessor) appears. These human species, of which there were a number of variants, did not last as long in evolutionary time as previous ones, apparently due simply to the increasingly rapid rate of evolution occurring in the human line at this time. Thus they represent a transitional time after the erectines leading up to modern man, and the later forms are sometimes not treated separately from the earliest modern forms of true Homo sapiens.[32]
150,000 to 120,000 B.C.: Homo sapiens neanderthalensis--
140,000 to 110,000 B.C.: First appearance of anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens).[34] The last Ice Age also dates from this period--
130,000 to 120,000 B.C.: Some of the earliest evidence for seafoods (molluscs, primarily) in the diet by coastal dwellers appears at this time,[39] although in one isolated location discovered so far, there is evidence going back 300,000 years ago.[40] Common use of seafoods by coastal aborigines becomes evident about 35,000 years ago,[41] but widespread global use in the fossil record is not seen until around 20,000 years ago and since.[42] For the most part, seafoods should probably not be considered a major departure,* however, as the composition of fish, shellfish, and poultry more closely resembles the wild land-
40,000 to 35,000 B.C.: The first "behaviorally modern" human beings--
40,000 B.C. to 10-8,000 B.C.: Last period prior to the advent of agriculture in which human beings universally subsisted by hunting and gathering (also known as the "Late Paleolithic"--
35,000 B.C. to 15-10,000 B.C.: The Cro-Magnons (fully modern pre-
25,000 to 15,000 B.C.: Coldest period of the last Ice Age, during which global temperatures averaged 14°F cooler than they do today[47] (with local variations as much as 59°F lower[48]), with an increasingly arid environment and much more difficult conditions of survival to which plants, animals, and humans all had to adapt.[49] The Eurasian steppes just before and during this time had a maximum annual summer temperature of
Humans in Europe and northern Asia, and later in North America, adapted by increasing their hunting of the large mammals such as mammoths, horses, bison and caribou which flourished on the open grasslands, tundra, and steppes which spread during this period.[51] Storage of vegetable foods that could be consumed during the harsh winters was also exploited. Clothing methods were improved (including needles with eyes) and sturdier shelters developed--
20,000 B.C. to 9,000 B.C.: Transitional period known as the "Mesolithic," during which the bow-
Also during this time, and probably also for some millennia prior to the Mesolithic (perhaps as early as 45,000 B.C.), ritual and magico-
Foods known to be gathered during the Mesolithic period in the Middle East were root vegetables, wild pulses (peas, beans, etc.), nuts such as almonds, pistachios, and hazelnuts, as well as fruits such as apples. Seafoods such as fish, crabs, molluscs, and snails also became common during this time.[60]
Approx. 10,000 B.C.: The beginning of the "Neolithic" period, or "Agricultural Revolution," i.e., farming and animal husbandry. The transition to agriculture was made necessary by gradually increasing population pressures due to the success of Homo sapiens' prior hunting and gathering way of life. (Hunting and gathering can support perhaps one person per square 10 miles; Neolithic agriculture 100 times or more that many.[61]) Also, at about the time population pressures were increasing, the last Ice Age ended, and many species of large game became extinct (probably due to a combination of both intensive hunting and disappearance of their habitats when the Ice Age ended).[62] Wild grasses and cereals began flourishing,* making them prime candidates for the staple foods to be domesticated, given our previous familiarity with them.[63] By 9,000 B.C. sheep and goats were being domesticated in the Near East, and cattle and pigs shortly after, while wheat, barley, and legumes were being cultivated somewhat before 7,000 B.C., as were fruits and nuts, while meat consumption fell enormously.[64] By 5,000 B.C. agriculture had spread to all inhabited continents except Australia.[65] During the time since the beginning of the Neolithic, the ratio of plant-
Remains of fossil humans indicate decrease in health status after the Neolithic. In most respects, the changes in diet from hunter-
Skeletal remains show that height decreased by four inches* from the Late Paleolithic to the early Neolithic, brought about by poorer nutrition, and perhaps also by increased infectious disease causing growth stress, and possibly by some inbreeding in communities that were isolated. Signs of osteoporosis and anemia, which was almost non-existent in pre-
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