Evolution of the human diet: Difference between revisions

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== Overview ==
== Overview ==
The human diet differs from that of other living primates in several important ways.  First, humans are highly omnivorous, exploiting a wide range of plant, animal, and fungal foods (although they do not tend to consume plants high in cellulose, unlike some primates).  Second, the human diet is comparatively high-quality, or dense in energy and nutrients.  Finally, there is not just one human diet, but instead a very wide range of diets situated within a highly diverse set of environments.  Although all humans share the same broad dietary requirements for calories, macronutrients, and micronutrients, different populations have discovered or invented significantly different strategies for meeting those requirements.
The human diet differs from that of other living primates in several important ways.  First, humans are highly omnivorous, exploiting a wide range of plant, animal, and fungal foods (although they do not tend to consume plants high in cellulose, unlike some primates).  Second, the human diet is comparatively high-quality, or dense in energy and nutrients.  Finally, there is not just one human diet, but instead a very wide range of diets situated within a highly diverse set of environments.  Although all humans share the same broad dietary requirements for calories, macronutrients, and micronutrients, various populations have discovered or invented significantly different strategies for meeting those requirements.
== Paleoenvironmental reconstruction ==
== Paleoenvironmental reconstruction ==



Revision as of 07:06, 10 March 2008

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The evolution of the human diet is an important research topic within physical anthropology and nutritional anthropology. It involves evidence drawn from human biology, nutritional science, the paleoanthropological analysis of hominin fossil remains, and comparative studies in primatology. Key issues that have been investigated to date include the functional relationship of dentition and craniofacial anatomy to diet, behavioral adaptations to diet (such as the use of tools and fire), the metabolic consequences of increased encephalization, and the relative evolutionary importance of meat-eating. Ancient hominin diets are inferred through a wide range of techniques, such as biomechanics, dental microwear analysis, stable isotope analysis, and paleoenvironmental reconstruction.

Overview

The human diet differs from that of other living primates in several important ways. First, humans are highly omnivorous, exploiting a wide range of plant, animal, and fungal foods (although they do not tend to consume plants high in cellulose, unlike some primates). Second, the human diet is comparatively high-quality, or dense in energy and nutrients. Finally, there is not just one human diet, but instead a very wide range of diets situated within a highly diverse set of environments. Although all humans share the same broad dietary requirements for calories, macronutrients, and micronutrients, various populations have discovered or invented significantly different strategies for meeting those requirements.

Paleoenvironmental reconstruction

Primatological and ethnographic comparisons

Morphological evidence

Craniofacial morphology and biomechanics

Dental morphology and microwear

Isotopic evidence

Archaeological evidence

Metabolism and bioenergetics

- This article is currently being developed as part of a student project involving an Anthropology course at the University of Colorado at Boulder. If you are not involved with this project, please refrain from further developing this article until otherwise noted. Thank you.