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Paleolithic Nutrition:

Your Future Is In Your Dietary Past

By Jack Challem
Copyright © 1997 by Jack Challem, The Nutrition Reporter™.
All rights reserved.

You are what you eat - and, perhaps surprisingly, you also are what your ancestors ate.

Just as individual genetics and experiences influence your nutritional requirements,


millions of years of evolution have also shaped your need for specific nutrients.

The implications? Your genes, which control every function of your body, are essentially
the same as those of your early ancestors. Feed these genes well, and they do their job -
keeping your healthy. Give these genes nutrients that are unfamiliar or in the wrong
ratios, and they go awry - aging faster, malfunctioning, and leading to disease.

According to S. Boyd Eaton, M.D., one of the foremost authorities on paleolithic


(prehistoric) diets, modern diets are out of sync with our genetic requirements. He makes
the point that the less you eat like your ancestors, the more susceptible you'll be to
coronary heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and many other "diseases of civilization."1 To
chart the right direction for improving your current or future nutrition, you have to
understand - and often adopt - the diet of the past.

The Origins Of Life And Nutrients

It helps to go back to the beginning - the very beginning.

Denham Harman, M.D., Ph.D., who conceived the free radical theory of aging, also
theorized that free radicals were a major player in the origin and evolution of life on
Earth. According to Harman, professor emeritus of the University of Nebraska, Omaha,
free radicals most likely triggered the chemical reactions that lead to the first and simplest
forms of life some 3.5 billion years ago. But because free radical oxidation can be
destructive, antioxidant defenses - including vitamins - likely developed soon after and
ensured the survival of life.2

In fact, the first building blocks of life may have been created when solar radiation
oxidized compounds in the primordial oceans and beaches to produce pantetheine, a form
of the B-vitamin pantothenic acid, according to chemist Stanley L. Miller, Ph.D., of the
University of California, San Diego.3
Pantetheine is the cornerstone of coenzyme A, a molecule that helps amino acids link
together - and makes possible the creation of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and
ribonucleic acid (RNA) the building blocks of your genes.

Over the next several billion years, many more molecules - amino acids, lipids, vitamins,
and minerals - formed and helped construct the countless forms of life. In turn, these life
forms became dependent on essentially the same group of nutrients.

According to Eaton, 99 percent of our genetic heritage dates from before our biological
ancestors evolved into Homo sapiens about 40,000 years ago, and 99.99 percent of our
genes were formed before the development of agriculture about 10,000 years ago.

Today's Diet, Yesterday's Genes

What we are - and were - can be deduced from paleontological data (mostly ancient
bones and coprolites) and the observed habits of hunter-gatherer tribes that survived into
the 20th century, according to Eaton, a radiologist and medical anthropologist at Emory
University.

Before the advent of agriculture about 10,000 years ago, all people were hunter-gatherers:
they gathered various fruits and vegetables to eat, they hunted animals for their meat. Of
course, the ratio of meat and vegetables varied with geographic location, climate, and
season, people were still hunter-gatherers. Until they began cultivating grains and
livestock, they rarely if ever drank milk beyond infancy or ate grains .

With the spread of agriculture, people shifted from nomadic groups to relatively stable
and larger societies to tend the fields. Culture and knowledge flourished. People also
began consuming large amounts of grain, milk, and domesticated meat. And they became
more sedentary as well.

With the industrial revolution, the diet changed even more dramatically. Beginning
around 1900, whole grains were routinely refined, removing much of their nutrition, and
refined sugar started to become commonplace. Reflecting on the changes in 1939,
nutritionist Jean Bogert noted, "The machine age has had the effect of forcing upon the
peoples of the industrial nations (especially the United States) the most gigantic human
feeding experiment ever attempted.4

Bogert was also disturbed by the growing use of refined cereal grains and sugar, and how
processed foods were becoming more popular than fresh fruits and vegetables. Over the
past 40 years, with the growth of fast-food restaurants, the average diet has changed even
more dramatically than Bogert could have imagined. People rely even more on processed
rather than fresh foods.

In fact, the many dietary changes over the past 10,000 years have outpaced our ability to
genetically adapt to them, according to Eaton. "That the vast majority of our genes are
ancient in origin means that nearly all of our biochemistry and physiology are fine-tuned
to conditions of life that existed before 10,000 years ago," he says.5

Looked at in another way, 100,000 generations of people were hunter-gatherers, 500


generations have depended on agriculture, and only 10 generations have lived since the
start of the industrial age, and only two generations have grown up with highly processed
fast foods.

"The problem is that our genes don't know it," Eaton points out. "They are programming
us today in much the same way they have been programming humans for at least 40,000
years. Genetically, our bodies now are virtually the same as they were then."6

The Paleolithic Diet

By working with anthropologists, Eaton has created what many experts consider a clear
picture of our prehistoric diet and lifestyle.

Today's panoply of diets - from fast-food burgers to various concepts of balanced diets
and food groups - bear little resemblance, superficially or in actual nutritional
constituents, to the diet H. sapiens and its ancestors consumed over millions of years. For
example, vitamin intake is lower today and the dietary fatty acid profile is substantially
different from our evolutionary diet. In other words, our diet today fails to provide the
biochemical and molecular requirements of H. sapiens.7

Here's how the major dietary constituents stack up past and present.

Carbohydrates. Early humans obtained about half of their calories from carbohydrates,
but these carbohydrates were rarely grains. Most carbohydrates came from vegetables
and fruit.

"Current carbohydrates often takes the form of sugars and sweeteners...Products of this
sort, together with items made from highly refined grain flours constitute empty
calories...devoid of accompanying essential amino and fatty acids, vitamins, minerals and
possibly phytochemicals," says Eaton.8

Fruits, vegetables, and fiber. Over the course of a year, gatherer-hunters typically
consumed more than 100 different species of fruits and vegetables. These foods provided
more than 100 grams of fiber daily, promoting regular bowel movements. Says Eaton:
"The fiber in preagricultural diets came almost exclusively from fruits, roots, legumes,
nuts and other naturally occurring noncereal plant sources, so it was less associated with
phytic acid than is fiber from cereal grains." [Phytic acid interferes with mineral
absorption.]

Today, fewer than 9 percent of Americans eat the recommended five daily servings of
fruits and vegetables. According to Gladys Block, Ph.D., a nutritional epidemiologist at
the University of California, Berkeley. Even people who regularly do eat fruits and
vegetables generally limit themselves to a handful of different foods.9

Protein and Fat. Early humans consumed about 30 percent protein, although it varied
with the season and geographic location. Much of this protein came from what people
now call "game meat" - undomesticated animals, such as deer and bison.10

Based on contemporary studies of hunter-gatherer societies, early humans consumed


relatively large amounts of cholesterol (480 mg daily), but their blood cholesterol levels
were much lower than those of the average American (about 125 mg per deciliter of
blood). There are a couple of reasons for this.

One, domestication of animals increases their saturated fat levels and alters the ratio of
omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids. Most Americans consume an 11:1 ratio of omega-6 to
omega-3 fatty acids. But a more ideal ratio, based on evolutionary and anthropological
data, would be in the range of 1:1 to 4:1. In other words, our ancestors consumed a higher
percentage of omega-3 fatty acids - and we probably should too.

Two, gathering and hunting required considerable physical effort, which means early
humans exercised a lot, which would have burned fat and lowered cholesterol levels.
"Their nomadic foraging lifestyle required vigorous physical exertion, and skeletal
remains indicate that they were typically more muscular than we are today," says Eaton.
"Life during the agricultural period was also strenuous, but industrialization has
progressively reduced obligatory physical exertion."11

Vitamins and minerals. Game meats and wild plant foods contain higher amounts of
vitamins and minerals relative to their protein and carbohydrates. Observes Eaton: "The
fruits, nuts, legumes, roots and other noncereals that provided 65-70% of typical
gatherer-hunter subsistence were generally consumed within hours of being gathered,
with little or no processing and often uncooked...it seems inescapable that preagrarian
humans would generally have had an intake of most vitamins and minerals that exceeded
currently recommended dietary allowances."12

The difference in consumption of sodium and potassium - electrolyte minerals necessary


for normal heart function - is especially dramatic. According to Eaton, the typical adult
American consumes about 4,000 mg of sodium daily, but less than 10 percent of this
amount occurs naturally in food. The rest is added during processing, cooking, or
seasoning at the table. Potassium consumption is lower, about 3,000 mg daily.

In contrast, early humans consumed only an estimated 600 mg of sodium, but 7,000 mg
of potassium daily. People, says Eaton, are the "only free-living terrestrial mammals
whose electrolyte intake exhibits this relationship."13 That reversed ratio could be one
reason why people are so prone to hypertension and other heart ailments.

Vitamin C And Human Evolution


Although dietary vitamin and mineral levels in the past were 1.5 to 5 times higher than
today, Eaton does not favor "megadoses" of vitamins. However, there is evolutionary
evidence that large doses of vitamin C may be needed for optimal health. The reason has
less to do with diet and more to do with an evolutionary accident.

Evolution often zigzags rather than follows a linear flow. One species might wipe out
another by eating it. Climatic and, more recently, industrial changes, also destroy species.
According to the theory of "punctuated equilibrium," proposed by Niles Eldredge, Ph.D.,
and Stephen Jay Gould, Ph.D., of Harvard University, catastrophic events - such as an
asteroid striking the Earth - can dramatically shift the course of evolution.14

One such catastrophic event of an unknown nature affected the pre-primate ancestors of
humans sometime between 25 and 70 million years ago, according to biochemist Irwin
Stone, Ph.D. This particular event led to a mutation that prevented our all of this species'
descendants from manufacturing own vitamin C. At least some of the species survived
and evolved into H. sapiens because they lived in a lush equatorial region with vitamin C-
rich foods. But nearly all other species of animals, from insects to mammals, continued to
produce their own vitamin C.

This theory regarding how our evolutionary ancestors lost their ability to produce vitamin
C is generally accepted by scientists, Stone's other theory is more controversial. He
contended that people never lost the need for large amounts of vitamin C, even though
they lost the ability to make it. Based on animal data, he estimated that people might
require 1.8-13 grams of vitamin C daily.15

Ironically, losing the ability to produce vitamin C may have actually accelerated the
evolution of primates into modern human beings, according to a new theory. Vitamin C is
an important antioxidant, and losing the ability to produce it would have allowed the
formation of large number of free radicals. These excessive free radicals would have
caused large numbers of DNA mutations, contributing to the aging process and diseases.
Some of these mutations would also have been inherited by offspring, creating many
biological variations - one of which eventually become H. sapiens.16

A Diet For The Future

For much of human history, life span was not particularly long. Two thousand years ago,
the average life expectancy was a mere 22 years, and infections and traumatic injury were
the principal causes of death. Better hygiene and sanitation have largely accounted for the
dramatic improvement in life expectancy in the 20th century.

Now, as people live longer, they are increasingly susceptible to greater amounts of free
radical damage and their principal endpoints, cardiovascular disease and cancer.

The question: where do we and our diets go from here?


Our evolutionary diet provides important clues to the "baseline" levels and ratios of
nutrients needed for health. The evidence suggests we should be eating a lot of plant
foods and modest amounts of game meat, but no grains or dairy products. With a clear
understanding of this diet, we have an opportunity to adopt to a better, more natural diet.
We can also do a better job of individualizing and optimizing our nutritional
requirements.

Based on our evolutionary and paleolithic diets, it's clear that modern diets are on the
wrong track - and that our diets are not satisfying our genetic requirements. In 1939, the
same year that Bogert bemoaned the rise of highly refined foods, Nobel laureate Albert
Szent-Györgyi, M.D., Ph.D., explored the importance of optimal (and not just minimal)
requirements of vitamins. Years later, Roger Williams, Ph.D., and Linus Pauling, Ph.D.,
would also promote the concept of optimal nutrition, based on providing ideal levels of
vitamins and other nutrients on a molecular level.

Pauling eloquently and often observed that health depended on the presence of nutritional
molecules. To set a dietary course for the future, we have to recognize how certain
molecules shaped our lives over millions of years. Paleolithic diets provide provide those
clues - and give us a sound foundation to build on, perhaps to protect and prime our genes
even further.

__________

A note to my friends who don't believe in evolution: Evolution describes the mechanism
of how life develops, but says nothing about whether a higher being was guiding the
process. Regardless, the diet of today is very different from, and not always as good as,
the diet of the past.

1 Eaton SB, Eaton SB III, Konner MJ, et al., "An evolutionary perspective enhances
understanding of human nutritional requirements," Journal of Nutrition, June
1996;126:1732-40.
2 Harman D: Aging: Prospects for further increases in the functional life span. Age
1994;17:119-46.
3 Keefe AD, Newton GL, and Miller SL, "A possible prebiotic synthesis of pantetheine, a
precursor to coenzyme A," Nature, Feb. 23, 1995;373:683-5.
4 Bogert LJ, Nutrition and Physical Fitness, Philadelphia: Saunders, 1939:437.
5 Eaton SB, Shostak M, and Konner M, The Paleolithic Prescription: A program of diet
& exercise and a design for living, New York: Harper & Row, 1988:39.
6 Eaton, et al., op cit, 1988:41.
7 Eaton, et al., op cit, 1996.
8 Eaton, et al., op cit, 1996.
9 Patterson BH, Block G, Rosenberger WF, et al., "Fruit and vegetables in the American
diet: data from the NHANES II survey," American Journal of Public Health, December
1990, 80:1443-1449.
10 Eaton SB and Konner M, "Paleolithic Nutrition: A consideration of its nature and
current implications," New England Journal of Medicine, Jan 31, 1983;312:283-9.
11 Eaton, et al., op cit, 1996.
12 Eaton, et al., op cit, 1996.
13 Eaton, et al., op cit, 1996.
14 Eldredge N, and Gould SJ, "Punctuated equilibria: an alternative to phyletic
gradualism," in Models in paleobiology, Schopf TJM, editor, San Francisco: Freeman
Cooper, 1972.
15 Stone I, "Hypoascorbemia, the genetic disease causing the human requirement for
exogenous ascorbic acid." Perspect Biol Med 1966;10:133-4.
16 Challem JJ, "Did the Loss of Endogenous Ascorbate Propel the Evolution of
Anthropoidea and Homo sapiens?" Medical Hypotheses, in press.

This article originally appeared in Nutrition Science News. The information provided by
Jack Challem and The Nutrition Reporter™ newsletter is strictly educational and not
intended as medical advice. For diagnosis and treatment, consult your physician.

copyright © 1998 The Nutrition Reporter™ - updated 05/25/98


for more information contact jack@thenutritionreporter.com
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