@anthonysramblin Both have to be interpreted in the context of tool use. I like @bendormiki research on the topic https://t.co/5lDyJxBA8J
@Climate_Earth20 Well, red meat and nothing else. Or red meat and eggs. Try just a few week and see what happens. It's balanced for man, who is a hunter / carnivore species (just like grass only is balanced for cows) https://t.co/cR3aiekKdk
effectivement, y compris l'alimentation ancestrale naturelle de l'humain https://t.co/cR3aieli2S
RT @AllyTransforms: If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: http…
RT @AllyTransforms: If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: http…
RT @AllyTransforms: If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: http…
RT @AllyTransforms: If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: http…
RT @AllyTransforms: @pendrobay @SBakerMD If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evoluti…
RT @AllyTransforms: If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: http…
RT @AllyTransforms: @pendrobay @SBakerMD If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evoluti…
RT @AllyTransforms: If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: http…
RT @AllyTransforms: @SBakerMD If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't…
RT @AllyTransforms: If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: http…
@pendrobay @SBakerMD If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: https://t.co/HTxJYqLFTb See also @bendormiki's work: 📃 Article: https://t.co/HLzt8Ryw1V 🎥 Podcast: https://t.co/KLjryYDZ
If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: https://t.co/HTxJYqLFTb See also @bendormiki's work: 📃 Article: https://t.co/HLzt8Ryw1V 🎥 Podcast: https://t.co/KLjryYDZnq
@SBakerMD If the food we've been eating in massive quantities for 3.4 million years is carcinogenic, evolution doesn't work: https://t.co/HTxJYqLFTb See also @bendormiki's work: 📃 Article: https://t.co/HLzt8Ryw1V 🎥 Podcast: https://t.co/KLjryYDZnq
@Special_Cactus @BHBEnjoyer There's actually a trend in megafauna decline and change in hunting technology. As fatty megafauna declined, technology shifted to smaller animals, e.g. arrows etc. i.e. tracking the technology tells us how much fat we ate. E.g.
@ScepticalDoctor Because there’s studies that prove we as humans tens of thousands of years ago via nitrogen isotope readings prove that we ate fatty hyper herbivores almost exclusively. How many upper Palaeolithic modern humans suffered from fatty liver
RT @sh_akers: @BeateEichenwald @CarnivoreIs Here is some real hard science, not nonsensical speculation based on gunk in teeth from eating…
@BeateEichenwald @CarnivoreIs Here is some real hard science, not nonsensical speculation based on gunk in teeth from eating the chyme most likely or what's left over of the analyse enzyme from when we were still swinging in the trees throwing poop at each
Old but gold. 'Man, the fat hunter.' Thanks @bendormiki https://t.co/3piLcDpt3U https://t.co/rfFKl3Tftj
@GBNEWS @TheSimonEvans @joshxhowie @nickdixoncomic or maybe because it's the most species appropriate food? https://t.co/cR3aiekKdk
@DrScottMurray Definitely! :) From the bioenergetic perspective, large fatty megafauna was the way to go. As we hunted them to extinction, smaller leaner & more nimble prey likely drove up our intelligence See my co-author @bendormiki https://t.co/Fx
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
RT @fleroy1974: After all the bashing and priggish whining, ANIMAL FAT deserves to regain our respect. It is (and always has been) a fundam…
@Diktyna_ @nomaes @CarnivoreSapien One reason I think that's used is that it's a form of marrow extraction. It helps get access to more of the fat, which became a more critical problem as we lost the fattier megafauna. https://t.co/Sw6yZ2Emfc
Selon les recherches de Miki Ben Dor @bendormiki nous sommes majoritairement des mangeurs de graisse et la graisse vient avec les protéines https://t.co/kIsQ3feI4p Les tubercules, les racines et les légumes suffisaient lorsque la chasse n'était pas fructu
RT @lchfRD: @ifixhearts According to the research of Miki Ben Dor (@bendormiki), we are predominantly fat eaters and fat comes with protein…
@ifixhearts According to the research of Miki Ben Dor (@bendormiki), we are predominantly fat eaters and fat comes with protein (https://t.co/noxo73YPvC). Tubers, roots and greens sufficed when the hunt wasn't successful.
@MacroFour Our ancient ancestors thrived on and prioritized saturated fat. https://t.co/l8nF5gym5d
@joshcmorrison @Aella_Girl Absolutely. Man is a fat hunter neither carnivore nor herbivore https://t.co/uAgxsv9SkM
@BrundoCoban @DrEenfeldt @raphaels7 @tednaiman @bschermd @DietDoctor The human diet during the paleolithic period was ~35% animal protein, 33% fat and the remainder plant protein. Humans evolved and thrived eating this way. https://t.co/udoAYzHqDG
RT @thalesnemo: @ElieJarrougeMD Humans are FAT EATERS not protein eaters than is why DOGS evolved with humans! Humans are designed to eat h…
@ElieJarrougeMD Humans are FAT EATERS not protein eaters than is why DOGS evolved with humans! Humans are designed to eat high fat (fat eaters) https://t.co/Tnvqw9FLYD https://t.co/9PLNC2IM0l Evolution of modern humans’ diet https://t.co/BxuCubRrJ7
@davidludwigmd @robi03271 @DrEades Have you seen this study? ➡️ Two men all meat diet for one year 1930 by Walter S McLean and Eugene F Du Bois https://t.co/dv0jgAvzCK ➡️ https://t.co/9PLNC2IM0l ➡️ https://t.co/G1WyA98h5b ➡️ https://t.co/jNNjpOW7Rl
@Jevan The larger the fatter see here https://t.co/r4LNpe2Uem
@DJMarti28657381 2.6 million years at least, but given primates occasional hunting likely much older https://t.co/MTHjTAgrjw https://t.co/fHfYCBAxe2 https://t.co/IrucFNBsbA perennial arguments about degree of hunting or scavenging, which have also been
@adhd_superpower According to this they ate a lot of elephant.But once that went they had to get clever to hunt the pigs and antelope. Still the 50% fat still holds as authentic. https://t.co/qFvaE5hZNT
@kallliie_rose @andyswarbs @newbud0 @AlpacaAurelius Only a vegan would make such a vacuous reply! Humans are essential carnivores who have the lowest Ph stomach of any carnivore. Our gut: unlike other great apes ,specialized for eating meat, not plants ht
@goodeyegenes @ErwanLeCorre Read this. https://t.co/y11ikAnCYL
@NutritionMadeS3 Where did they get all those foods during the winter throughout the ice-age? How much of the plant material in their plaque was from eating the stomach contents of their kills? N15 data is far superior to speculatiing about gunk on teeth.
RT @sh_akers: @TheVeganDragon_ @VinnieTortorich @PCRM @nutrition_facts @TColinCampbellF @vegannutrition1 Garbage study. Here's some real s…
@TheVeganDragon_ @VinnieTortorich @PCRM @nutrition_facts @TColinCampbellF @vegannutrition1 Garbage study. Here's some real science. N15 isotope analysis is what's needed to get a real indication on diet, not crap in teeth. https://t.co/HF8pCDiQ6Y
@TrejbalChris @ZacharyWenger @antoniotherose @SBakerMD @jonnettlefold @ScepticalDoctor @AmandaZZ100 @cambridge_pt See also various work by @bendormiki eg https://t.co/Sw6yZ2Emfc
@DamienAMEUIL @CitaroCapacityL la recherche avance, ca se precise https://t.co/cR3aiekKdk
RT @MariaXCross: Today, modern hunter gatherers show a strong preference for animal-source foods over plant-based foods, even when living i…
@michael_saylor excellent podcast with @saifedean as for the lean meat hypothesis 🍗 i think you’ll find this illuminating #fathunter https://t.co/VYzNV6fA7n @bendormiki
Today, modern hunter gatherers show a strong preference for animal-source foods over plant-based foods, even when living in vegetation-rich areas https://t.co/3ZCL37pOCM
@Tom_Babington1 @ScepticalDoctor https://t.co/f9IN5GIvCv a bit more recent
@EstebanDL @Doc_Valencia Mediante una excelente construcción cultural. https://t.co/ZNFCIuyO0S Como hoy la construcción cultural nos mata necesitamos construir un conocimiento que nos salve. Y ese es, basado en evidencia, y en comprensión. Así es como com
@davidllacer @carlos_stro Mira, por si no sabes por donde, puedes empezar por un estudio sobre alimentación que nos forzó a evolucionar: "Man, the fat hunter". En texto y en vídeo para que se te haga más ameno. https://t.co/hwYmpWtP8u https://t.co/1Rb1TZjp
@DoctorTro @Tony87505461 @Travis_Statham @tednaiman @JayJone52035336 @DArtagnanFoods @bendormiki There are some references in here https://t.co/Sw6yZ2mLnE.
@HermanPontzer @Travis_Statham @TuckerGoodrich @paulmelzer1 @throwingspears @LowCarbVet @p70S6K @bendormiki @CarnivoreMD @KenDBerryMD @DrPaulMason @SBakerMD @KetoDocCLT @KevinH_PhD For paleoanthropology, I am persuaded that the role of fat seeking as early
@mradjenkinson1 @KenDBerryMD Sure. There's apparently evidence all the way back to 1.7 mya, but habitual, widespread use seems only likely from 400 kya or so, as argued by @bendormiki et al here: https://t.co/egd5o5OdeS
@eatlikeanimals @ituchaudhuri @MacroFour @Karageorgos15 @tednaiman @FructoseNo @ProfTimNoakes @lowcarbusa We didn't come from carnivores, we came to animal fat based diets from herbivore origins. So we have a lower ceiling for protein intake. See e.g. http
@Qafzeh @rakemeny @SAPIENS_org Man the Fat Hunter (& the loss of #elephants) https://t.co/T5KpDfP01c
Interesting article on the early development of Sapiens and evidence of diet shifts 200k - 400k yes ago: - https://t.co/i2BI2TKyg6
@ADreyzen @MactatorMaximus @OZmandia @Karageorgos15 @tednaiman @dramerling @DikemanDave @Mangan150 @bendormiki Well, I agree and disagree. :-) I'm not arguing necessarily for 80% fat! Maybe more in the 60-70% range? But megafauna were much fatter than wild
@OZmandia @ADreyzen @tednaiman By traditional cultures, do you mean post agriculture era cultures? Because it all became different after the loss of the megafauna. Modern HGs aren't representative. See eg @bendormiki 's work https://t.co/Sw6yZ2mLnE
@vegansie Have you read anytime some non-vegan biased paper? https://t.co/txlJT1ZqZj
@whsource Mainly fat https://t.co/MzBuml7o1S
RT @MariaXCross: Homo erectus experienced more brain growth than any other human. The elephant was their favourite food. They had a: "conti…
RT @MariaXCross: Homo erectus experienced more brain growth than any other human. The elephant was their favourite food. They had a: "conti…
Homo erectus experienced more brain growth than any other human. The elephant was their favourite food. They had a: "continuous necessity ...to consume animal fat as part of their diet, especially when taking into account their large brains" https://t.co/3
@GLanguet @GeWoessner @LePoint Un peu de lecture, mais je doute que t'y pige quoi ce soit: https://t.co/jEQntCZQE9 https://t.co/rV9Oe05elF https://t.co/Cunqun62kL https://t.co/MhnWti45DO
Irony is...when you cite a study against evolutionary carnivory that was written by a paleoanthropologist who began eating the carnivore diet because of his findings. He should probably have looked up Miki Ben Dor before citing him.
@CarnivoreIs @MactatorMaximus @MarketAlly @bokkiedog @fmahmad88 @KetoCarnivore @tednaiman iso studies underestimate plant intake. See here for estimates for hominins: https://t.co/aou7J2x1XS
The fact that we are upright, hairless apes with more sweat glands then almost any other mammal, that we can more easily achieve ketosis and are extreme endurance runners/persist hunters (not sprinters... https://t.co/b2RVqTkOjC
@DickieRAnderson @kevinnbass @MikhailaAleksis Did in, faceless Dickie! https://t.co/y11ikAnCYL
@MsVanillaRose @DrMartica @kevinnbass You’ll find the links to the data in the references https://t.co/y11ikAnCYL
@Red_Nec @Evolving_Moloch @simonsarris @nathancofnas It's true animal products eaten at paleolithic were not as lean as Cordain believed it. Fattest animals and fattest parts of animal were particularly targetted. Some, like @bendormiki et al., even sugges
@C4M53883828 @CarnivoreKeto @NickSzabo4 @drnevadagray @CarnivoreCast But seriously... https://t.co/gwkHGrrUmF
@naturalhealthbl @BlackATTR @IamOnzie @BioLayne Try actually reading the entire piece and all the resources https://t.co/y11ikAnCYL
@heroicsnail @fattaak @KetoMojoGogo @drjkahn @SBakerMD Could care less, I know the diet we evolved eating as a species and it’s not anything close to your plant-based nonsense and it’s backed by isotope data, which is hard science https://t.co/y11ikAnCYL