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Paleolithic Nutrition

Nutrition in Clinical Practice, 2010
A quarter century has passed since the first publication of the evolutionary discordance hypothesis, according to which departures from the nutrition and activity patterns of our hunter‐gatherer ancestors have contributed greatly and in specifically definable ways to the endemic chronic diseases of modern civilization.
Melvin, Konner, S Boyd, Eaton
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Urals: Paleolithic

2014
The Urals Mountains was a key loci of the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic occupation oikumene. The mountain regions with the adjoining areas of the East European Plains and the West Siberian Lowland have principal significance for documenting the processes and natural contexts of the Pleistocene human expansion from the SE parts of the European continent ...
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Beyond the Paleolithic prescription: Commentary

Nutrition Reviews, 2014
In their recent paper, Drs. Turner and Thompson1 question whether the assumption of a Paleolithic life as the human standard is complete because of its “relying primarily on genetic understandings of the human diet.” According to the authors, the Paleolithic assumption focuses too much on “a single model of human ancestral diets” and on “cultural ...
Muskiet, Frits A. J.   +1 more
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Paleolithic Renaissance

2017
London Archaeologist, 1 (11), 259 ...
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Paleomedicine and the use of plant secondary compounds in the Paleolithic and Early Neolithic

Evolutionary Anthropology (print), 2019
Reconstructing plant use before domestication is challenging due to a lack of evidence. Yet, on the small number of sites with assemblages, the wide range of different plant species cannot be explained simply in terms of nutrition.
K. Hardy
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Paleolithic Art and Cognition

The Journal of Psychology, 1992
In this article, I have explored some of the possible relationships between the first appearance of representational art in human history and the early development of human cognition. I argue that most Upper Paleolithic depictions directly represent generalized mental images of their animal subjects rather than percepts or recollected scenes from life ...
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Paleolithic Nutrition Revisited

1999
Abstract The nutritional needs of today’s humans arose through a multimillion-year evolutionary process, during nearly all of which genetic change reflected the life circumstances of our ancestral species (Eaton & Konner, 1985).
S Boyd Eaton, S B Eaton, Melvin J Konner
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