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Michelle Park
Tue, 2 Aug 2011 21:46:53 -0400
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Hello list members!
I am looking for a greens powder to put in my smoothies. I just finished up
a container of The Amazing Meal. I liked it but wanted to try something new
so I bought Sunwarrior protein powder and freeze dried wheat grass for the
greens. Unfortunately I had a reaction to the wheat grass (I am gluten
intolerant). I was wondering if anyone out there is a raw vegan that suffers
from gluten intolerance or celiac disease? If so could you reccomend a
greens powder that works for you?

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Bob Gragson
Sun, 25 Jan 2009 16:30:35 -0600
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I hope this is of interest. Just imagine what a farm or garden at the White
House might do for the raw foods movement.

Our farmer here at Troy Gardens in Madison, Wisconsin, is locked in a tight
race for the lead for the voting for White House Farmer. At 4:13 PM Central
today, with 28% of the vote, she is in second and only trails the leader by
366 votes, or 4%, from a field of 34 candidates.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 22 Apr 2007 10:15:49 -0700
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the idea of buying locally-grown foods (usually but not always
organic) has become a popular topic in food circles; the term
"locavore" is sometimes used to describe this philosophy. The link
below takes you to an article in the latest issue of a local weekly
newspaper, "Pacific Sun". Said newspaper is published in San Rafael,
California, and has as primary circulation area, Marin County,
California (a very high income area indeed). It describes an
experiment in which the author in fact ate nearly exclusively locally
grown/produced, organic foods for a week. The estimated cost was
almost US $300 for a

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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 26 Feb 2007 12:07:46 -0800
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Complementary Therapies in Clinical Practice
Article in Press, Corrected Proof
doi:10.1016/j.ctcp.2006.12.005

Factors affecting adherence to a raw vegan diet
Lilli B Link

Summary

The purpose of this study was to evaluate adherence and identify predictors
of adherence to a raw vegan diet (i.e., uncooked plant foods) following
a stay at a raw vegan institute. In this cohort study of guests at a raw
vegan institute, subjects completed written questionnaires upon arrival and
12 weeks later. Of 107 eligible guests, 84 participated. Mean age was 54
years, 23 were male, and 73 white. Fifty-one completed the 12-week
follow-up. Eight (16%) reported

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Janet
Sat, 27 Jan 2007 12:08:18 -0500
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I find it remarkable that they experienced the health improvements
after only 12 days. - Janet

Human guinea pigs eat "ape diet" for 12 days, experience remarkable
health improvements

In a British experiment filmed for television, nine volunteers agreed to
set-up camp in a zoo and eat an ape's diet for 12 days. The goal of the
experiment was to create a visual documentary of the types of
reactions that
would take place from giving up standard processed foods in favor of
a diet
eaten for hundreds of millions of years by our ancestors. The diet
included
2,300 calories of

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 7 Jan 2007 10:08:24 -0800
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Below are 3 articles on inflammatory bowel disease. Read even one of the=20
articles, and you will know more about the subject than all the raw food=20
gurus combined. :-)

#1
Clinical Nutrition
Article in Press
doi:10.1016/j.clnu.2006.10.001=20

REVIEW ARTICLE
Bioecological control of inflammatory bowel disease
Stig Bengmark

Summary

It is today generally accepted, that the intestinal bacterial flora is=20
deeply involved in the pathogenesis of human previous terminflammatory=20
bowel diseasesnext term (IBDs), although the exact presence of unwanted or =

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 7 Jan 2007 10:04:46 -0800
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The article below is extremely good and thought-provoking.

Cell
Volume 127, Issue 7 , 29 December 2006, Pages 1309-1321
doi:10.1016/j.cell.2006.12.006

Review
The Molecular Genetics of Crop Domestication
John F. Doebley, Brandon S. Gaut and Bruce D. Smith

Abstract
Ten thousand years ago human societies around the globe began to
transition from hunting and gathering to agriculture. By 4000 years ago,
ancient peoples had completed the domestication of all major crop species
upon which human survival is dependent, including rice, wheat, and maize.
Recent research has begun to reveal the genes responsible for this
agricultural revolution. The list of genes to

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 15 Dec 2006 09:22:12 -0800
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A quote from:
http://www.nature.com/ng/index.html

[In an advance publication article in 'Nature Genetics'] Sarah Tishkoff and
colleagues report that lactase persistence due to variation upstream of the
gene encoding lactase-phlorizin hydrolase (LPH) has arisen independently in
Africans and Europeans. Their results confirm the strong selective pressure
of adult milk consumption in human evolution.

Nature Genetics
Published online: 10 December 2006; doi:10.1038/ng1946

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 10 Dec 2006 11:16:06 -0800
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Most of us have seen various claims that Steve Jobs (co-founder of Apple
Computers) is or was a fruitarian. A few relevant points:

* There is no reason to believe that he is still a rawist now; some of the
mentions note that he WAS raw for a short time, in the past; other
mentions blur this distinction
* Unlike the fruitarians who offer no proof, I have in-hand an
advertisment for Paul Bragg's products. The ad has a (current !) picture
of Steve Jobs standing next to Patricia Bragg. Steve is quoted under the
photo: "I've been reading the

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 1 Nov 2006 13:21:57 -0800
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Resveratrol, a substance found in grapes and red wine, can increase the
lifespan of mice. This is the same effect seen with calorie restriction.

Article: Resveratrol improves health and survival of mice on a
high-calorie diet
Authors: Joseph A. Baur et. al. (long author list)

Nature advance online publication 1 November 2006 | doi:10.1038/nature05354

Abstract
Resveratrol (3,5,4'-trihydroxystilbene) extends the lifespan of diverse species
including Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila
melanogaster. In these organisms, lifespan extension is dependent on Sir2, a
conserved deacetylase proposed to underlie the beneficial effects of caloric
restriction. Here we show that resveratrol shifts the physiology

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 13 Sep 2006 09:39:37 -0700
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...and raw diets are usually high-fiber diets. Oh the irony: a "mucus-less"
diet in fact promotes mucus creation.

Disruption-Induced Mucus Secretion: Repair and Protection
K. Miyake, T. Tanaka, P. L. McNeil

PLOS Biology
Volume 4 | Issue 9 | SEPTEMBER 2006

Full-text online, free to all, at:
http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0040276

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 12 Sep 2006 08:03:25 -0700
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Mad honey poisoning
Abdulkadir Gunduz MD, Suleyman Turedi MD, Hukum Uzun MD, and Murat Topbas MD

The American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Volume 24, Issue 5 , September 2006, Pages 595-598

Abstract (and full-text) online at the ScienceDirect website. Full-text will
cost money unless you have a subscripton or library proxy.

Abstract

Grayanotoxin intoxication, which is mostly seen in the eastern Black Sea region
of Turkey, stems from the 'mad honey' made by bees from the rhododendron
plant flowers. In low doses, this causes dizziness, hypotension, and
bradycardia, and in high doses, impaired consciousness, seizures, and
atrioventricular block (AVB).

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 17 Aug 2006 08:01:42 -0700
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Some years ago a book called "Children of the Sun" came out. It is/was a
picture anthology book, and provided an all-too-limited glimpse into the role
of the German naturalism movement of the late 1800's and into the 1930's, as
one of the "roots" of today's modern raw foods movement. I liked Kennedy's book
but also was indirectly disappointed with it -- it gave me a brief taste of the
history, but it also left me "hungry" for more historical information.

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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 7 Aug 2006 14:19:45 -0700
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[Presented to the list because it may intereste some readers. Don't assume
that I agree or disagree with the article.]

Although it is not a scientific article, the following editorial that appeared
in yesterday's "San Francisco Chronicle" newspaper may be of interest to
list members:

An organic foods dilemma
They're mass-produced by agribiz but better than eating poisons

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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 18 Jul 2006 13:15:19 -0700
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The review article below discusses the approaches used to study natural
selection and adaptations in the human lineage. It provides a nice overview
of the ongoing research in this (interesting) area.

Science 16 June 2006:
Vol. 312. no. 5780, pp. 1614 - 1620

Positive Natural Selection in the Human Lineage
P. C. Sabeti, S. F. Schaffner, B. Fry, J. Lohmueller, P. Varilly, O.
Shamovsky,
A. Palma, T. S. Mikkelsen, D. Altshuler, E. S. Lander

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 16 Jul 2006 10:15:05 -0700
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Interesting paper in the latest AJCN:

Petra LL Goyens, Mary E Spilker, Peter L Zock, Martijn B Katan, and Ronald P
Mensink
Conversion of alpha-linolenic acid in humans is influenced by the absolute
amounts of alpha-linolenic acid and linoleic acid in the diet and not by their
ratio

Am J Clin Nutr 2006 84: 44-53

Abstract at:
http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/abstract/84/1/44

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 16 Jul 2006 10:14:30 -0700
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European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2006) 60, 828–837.

Public views of the benefits and barriers to the consumption of a plant-based
diet
E J Lea, D Crawford, and A Worsley

Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to examine consumers' perceived benefits
and barriers to the consumption of a plant-based diet.

Design: Mail survey that included questions on perceived benefits and barriers
to the consumption of a plant-based diet.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 16 Jul 2006 09:22:20 -0700
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The latest issue of "California", the magazine of the UC Berkeley alumni
association, has a short article:

Carbon clues, written by Heather Smith.

The article mentions the work of Prof Todd Dawson, who uses a mass spectrometer
to analyze the source of chemicals (and foods/water). Anyway, the article
mentions that:

* the instructor has his students analyze bottled water that is supposedly from
Fiji -- turns out the isotope ratio of the water indicates a western North
American source. [Fake Fiji water.]
* the instrument was used on student vegetarians, to see if they were really
vegetarian. Results: not always;

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 16 Jul 2006 09:20:28 -0700
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Michael Pollan, who teaches at UC Berkeley, has received a lot of publicity for
his new book, "The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals."

The Monthly
July 2006, 36(10)
Article: Food Pyramid/Food Warrior by Paul Kilduff
pp 11-13

He was recently interviewed in "The Monthly", a free newspaper distributed in
the SF bay area. He is very critical of organics and Whole Foods markets. Some
quotes:

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Thomas E. Billings
Sat, 15 Jul 2006 15:37:32 -0700
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An excellent recent article that, in the context of strawberry production,
highlights some of the tradeoffs in industrial agriculture: reliable,
mass-production can lower price and increase avaialability, but at the expense
of foods that have real flavor.

>From "Fruit Gardener", July & August 2006 issue, vol 38, #4.
Published by California Rare Fruit Growers

Article: California Strawberries [pp 14-17, 23]
Subtitle: Compromises underlie ubiquity
Author: David Karp

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Thomas E. Billings
Sat, 15 Jul 2006 15:31:36 -0700
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In-the-works nutrition book from the University of California Press, that may
be of interest to some list members. To be published Sept 2006:

The Queen of Fats
Why Omega-3s Were Removed from the Western Diet and What We Can Do to Replace
Them
Susan Allport

DESCRIPTION

A nutritional whodunit that takes readers from Greenland to Africa to Israel,
The Queen of Fats gives a fascinating account of how we have become deficient
in a nutrient that is essential for good health: the fatty acids known as
omega-3s. Writing with intelligence and passion, Susan Allport tells the story
of these vital

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 14 Jul 2006 09:31:53 -0700
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New book from the University of California Press, that may be of interest to
some list members. Published Jan 2006:

Behavioral Ecology and the Transition to Agriculture
Edited by Douglas J. Kennett and Bruce Winterhalder

DESCRIPTION

This innovative volume is the first collective effort by archaeologists and
ethnographers to use concepts and models from human behavioral ecology to
explore one of the most consequential transitions in human history: the origins
of agriculture. Carefully balancing theory and detailed empirical study, and
drawing from a series of ethnographic and archaeological case studies from
eleven locations--including North and South America, Mesoamerica, Europe, the


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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 26 Jun 2006 08:34:38 -0700
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A new nutrition book that may be of interets to list-members:

Calcium in human health
[edited by] Connie M. Weaver and Robert P. Heaney ;
foreword by Lawrence G. Raisz
Publisher Totowa, N.J. : Humana Press, c2006

Contents
Bone as the calcium nutrient reserve / Robert P. Heaney -- Cellular functions
and fluxes of calcium / Emmanuel M. Awumey and Richard D. Bukoski --
Nutritional epidemiology / Carol J. Boushey -- Clinical approaches for studying
calcium metabolism and its relationship to disease / Connie M. Weaver --
Kinetic studies / Meryl E. Wastney, Yongdong Zhao, and Connie M. Weaver --


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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 25 Jun 2006 10:43:07 -0700
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The following is provided as a public service for list-members in the
SF Bay area. I do not receive payments of any kind in the following
matter.

Coming to the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley, California:

FRI JUL 14 2006
7:30 The Death of Mr. Lazarescu
Cristi Puiu (Romania, 2005)

(Moartea Domnului Lazarescu). Rarely has trusting one's life to health
professionals seemed deadlier than in this sardonic Romanian comédie humaine
that's already won over thirty international prizes and been called “the most
remarkable film of the year” by the Village Voice. Living alone with his cats
and his alcohol, the

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 22 Jun 2006 08:57:17 -0700
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PNAS | June 20, 2006 | vol. 103 | no. 25 | 9578-9583

Phylogeography of Asian wild rice, Oryza rufipogon, reveals multiple
independent domestications of cultivated rice, Oryza sativa
Jason P. Londo, Yu-Chung Chiang, Kuo-Hsiang Hung, Tzen-Yuh Chiang, and Barbara
A. Schaal

Cultivated rice, Oryza sativa L., represents the world's most important staple
food crop, feeding more than half of the human population. Despite this
essential role in world agriculture, the history of cultivated rice's
domestication from its wild ancestor, Oryza rufipogon, remains unclear. In this
study, DNA sequence variation in three gene regions is examined in a
phylogeographic approach

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 21 Jun 2006 20:33:32 -0700
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The article below provides an excellent (and fascinating) discussion of
organic food safety issues.

Organic Food: Buying More Safety or Just Peace of Mind? A Critical Review
of the Literature.
Authors: Magkos, Faidon, Arvaniti, Fotini, Zampelas, Antonis

Critical Reviews in Food Science & Nutrition
Jan 2006, Vol. 46 Issue 1, p23-56.

Abstract:
Consumer concern over the quality and safety of conventional food has
intensified in recent years, and primarily drives the increasing demand for
organically grown food, which is perceived as healthier and safer. Relevant
scientific evidence, however, is scarce, while anecdotal reports abound.
Although there is an urgent need

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 21 Jun 2006 20:31:38 -0700
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Graphs of Google search frequencies*;

Vegetarian vs vegan vs raw foods, at:

http://www.google.com/trends?q=vegan%2C+vegetarian%2C+raw+foods&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all

Raw foods vs raw vegan:

http://www.google.com/trends?q=raw+foods%2C++raw+vegan&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all

Living foods vs raw foods:

http://www.google.com/trends?q=living+foods%2C+raw+foods&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all

Vegetarianism vs Atkins diet:

http://www.google.com/trends?q=+vegetarianism%2C+atkins+diet&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all

Vegetarianism vs South Beach Diet:

http://www.google.com/trends?q=+vegetarianism%2C+south+beach+diet&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all

Interesting!

These terms:
fruitarian, natural hygiene, 8-1-1 diet, hippocrates diet, instinctive eating,
ann wigmore, herbert shelton -- did not have enough search volume to even
bother graphing.

*Presumably search frequency is a rough proxy measure for popular interest in the
topic.

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David Karas
Thu, 12 Jan 2006 10:12:49 -0800
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The paleofood list was moved to a new server yesterday. There is a new
address for messages to the list. it is [log in to unmask]
The archives are now located at
http://listserv.icors.org/archives/raw-food.html
Our pre 1999 archives have been restored also.

As I learn more I will post the information. So far it has been
relatively painless.

David Karas
listowner paleofood
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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 26 Oct 2005 09:05:24 -0700
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although it is technically off-topic for raw-food, I am submitting
the abstract for a recent study that may be of interest to the list
members. The study suggests that the intensive, industrial, irrigated
agriculture being practiced in California's San Joaquin valley - a major
food source - might not be sustainable, long term.

PNAS | October 25, 2005 | vol. 102 | no. 43 | 15352-15356

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 23 Oct 2005 09:34:34 -0700
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The October 2005 issue of MIT Technology Review (From the Editor, p. 12)
discusse a new cooking method known as sous vide or hypercuisine:
foods are vacuum-packed, then cooked for very long periods at low
temperatures. (Vacuum-packing is to reduce bacterial growth and
hold in flavors.)

Gabriel Cousens has promoted similar low-temp "raw" soups or stews in
the past, but without the vacuum packing process.

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 13 Oct 2005 07:45:13 -0700
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http://www.livingnutrition.com/fwn/read.php?1,426
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 9 Oct 2005 10:50:26 -0700
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The raw vegan pseudoscience frauds claim try to claim that humans have evolved
on a raw vegan diet. However, in order to make this claim, they have to claim
that humans have not adapted to an omnivorous diet, despite following such
diets for 2.5+ million years. This puts the frauds in a tough position:
1) in one case, they claim that evolution of the digestive system is impossible
in the time period. That claim is contradicted by the record of brain evolution
over the same period, i.e., the fakes are arguing that "the brain can evolve,
but the stomach cannot".


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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 9 Oct 2005 10:47:41 -0700
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Read the full-text paper, FREE, at:
http://biology.plosjournals.org/archive/1545-7885/3/11/pdf/10.1371_journal.pbio.0030380-p-L.pdf

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 9 Oct 2005 10:47:01 -0700
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the first major scientific paper on Orthorexia nervosa, the symptoms of which
can be seen in many raw diet gurus:

Orthorexia nervosa: A preliminary study with a proposal for diagnosis and an
attempt to measure the dimension of the phenomenon

L.M. Donini*, D. Marsili*, M.P. Graziani **, M. Imbriale*, and C. Cannella*
*Istituto di Scienza dell’Alimentazione, Università degli Studi di Roma “La
Sapienza”, and **Istituto di Scienze dell’Alimentazione, CNR, Avellino, Italy

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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 6 Sep 2005 09:27:55 -0700
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Many chiropractors are active in the raw foods community. Some of them are
promoting extreme diets - natural hygiene, fruit based 8-1-1. An
interesting question arises: does Chiropractic have a scientific
basis? The article below is part of a debate that suggests the answer is
"no":

Subluxation: Dogma or Science?

Journal: Chiropractic and Osteopathy

Open access, full text online (free) at:
http://www.chiroandosteo.com/content/pdf/1746-1340-13-17.pdf

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:46:47 -0700
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a paper in the latest issue of PNAS discusses the possibility of using GE
(genetic engineering) to produce grains that exclude phytates - a common and
troublesome anti-nutrient.

PNAS | August 30, 2005 | vol. 102 | no. 35 | 12612-12617

Generation of phytate-free seeds in Arabidopsis through disruption of inositol
polyphosphate kinases

Jill Stevenson-Paulik, Robert J. Bastidas, Shean-Tai Chiou, Roy A. Frye and
John D. York

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 1 Sep 2005 07:37:03 -0700
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for indecent exposure, in New York City:

http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/342442p-292359c.html

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 26 Aug 2005 09:20:37 -0700
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a partial list of Berkeley's vegetarian restaurants:

http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/article.cfm?issue=08-26-05&storyID=22188

Berkeley is very veg-friendly. Besides the places listed above, others that
come to mind are:

Cafe Muse, on Durant Avenue behind the University Art Museum - has many raw
vegan dishes on the menu
Numerous Indian restaurants that serve veg dishes - but most such food is
heavily spiced and/or oily
There's an Italian vegetarian place on Center Street - never been there, so
can't comment...
Long Life Vegi/Seafood on University - Chinese, cheap, close to UC Berkeley
campus, popular
Numerous street vendors near UC Berkeley campus - salads, baked potatoes,
Greek

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 26 Aug 2005 08:27:15 -0700
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a new book addresses the evolutionary benefits of grandparents:

http://rutgerspress.rutgers.edu/acatalog/__Grandmotherhood_2266.html

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 9 Aug 2005 13:34:21 -0700
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An interesting review paper:

Is docosahexaenoic acid, an n-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid, required
for development of normal brain function? An overview of evidence from
cognitive and behavioral tests in humans and animals
Joyce C McCann and Bruce N Ames

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 82, No. 2, 281-295, August 2005
http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/abstract/82/2/281

This review is part of a series intended for nonspecialists that will summarize
evidence relevant to the question of whether causal relations exist between
micronutrient deficiencies and brain function. Here, we focus on experiments
that used cognitive or behavioral tests as outcome measures in experimental
designs that

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 5 Aug 2005 08:17:07 -0700
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Here's a non-technical article re: quality issues with olive oil

http://www.themonthly.com/feature08-05.html

The lead-in for the article says:
Cooks who use oil that's labeled as "extra virgin" might be dismayed to
learn that some brands blend in hazelnut oil and then dye the mixture with
chlorophyll. Legitimate olive oil producers say "like a virgin" just isn't
good enough. They want to see federal guidelines in place.

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 3 Aug 2005 13:48:45 -0700
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article on the masssive abundance of tomato varieties available here in
Berkeley: (registration may be required)

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/03/dining/03bowl.html?oref=login

PS if the URL does not work, go to the NY times home page, do
search on: Berkeley Bowl

Thomas E. (Tom) Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 31 Jul 2005 12:50:14 -0700
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Goji - aka Lycium aka Wolfberry - berries in dried form are being sold
to the raw community as a superfood and at "super-high" prices as
well. One can get goji berries in chinatowns here in California
for $3/pound.

More importantly, here in California chinatowns, you can buy cuttings
of the wolfberry/goji vine. These can be used:

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 31 Jul 2005 12:44:53 -0700
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I recently acquired a copy of the newly published book: The Whole Soy
Story, by Kaayla T. Daniel. It is not one of those slim, non-technical
books/booklets you see in health food stores, that are poorly rewritten
ad copy.

Insetad, it is a carefully reearched and heavily footnoted book with a
large scope, that tells you a great deal about soy. Those of you
interested in soy should find the book an interesting read.

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 1 Jul 2005 13:33:16 -0700
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Seen on a web BB--Two well-known fruitarians with cancer:

http://www.rawfoodsupport.com/read.php?f=12&i=91495&t=91495

I disagree with Rene on fruit diets, but I sincerely wish him well and
hope for a quick recovery.

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 22 Jun 2005 09:46:27 -0700
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from the "Onion in 2056". The Onion is a well-known humor
newspaper:

http://www.theonion.com/2056-06-22/news/4/

Tom Billings
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J & K Whitson
Mon, 20 Jun 2005 23:08:24 -0500
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I am not "looking" for a family that eats raw. I am a family that eats raw.
I am expecting people who are selling information and products to not be
hypocritical. Honesty and explanation is to be expected from individuals who
are selling others a diet. I know Storm and Jinjee through
www.thegardendiet.com and know they are a valued part of the raw food
lifestyle. I do not practice a vegan diet like they claim to. I do not
subscribe to anyone's or group's diet. I am not saying Arlin is a hypocrite.
I do not know him personally. I

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 19 Jun 2005 11:42:27 -0700
Reply
an article re: Nature's First Law at URL below. Note photo of Thor - aka
Stephen Arlin - and the massive weight gain. Makes one question if he is
still eating predominantly raw.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20050614-9999-1b14raw.html

The above article is being discussed on the other/various raw boards.
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Show Replies 4 Replies
Theta Sigma
Mon, 13 Jun 2005 08:56:49 -0700
Reply
Ingrid Bauer/Jean-Claude Catry wrote:

>< and an under-the-sink "brick"
>
>
>>style filter for drinking water.>
>>
>>
>
> what system is a brick filter ?
>
>
>
Informally termed a "brick" it is a relatively small (about the size of
a clay brick), dense, multi-layer water filter (often a cylinder)
usually consisting of a carbon filter section and a mechanical filter
made to block particles larger than 1-2 microns or so. These can be used
in above- or below-the-sink situations and are usually for low-volume
such as for drinking/ cooking water.
Reply
No Replies
Alouette Mayer
Sat, 11 Jun 2005 11:37:22 -0700
Reply
unsubscribe

Terry Benouameur <[log in to unmask]> wrote:Bacteria is good for us.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Debbie Maddox"
To:
Sent: Saturday, June 11, 2005 12:46 PM
Subject: Re: diversity of human gut bacteria

>
>
> don't mean to sound dumb here but what exactly does this mean in simple
> laymens terms??
Reply
No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Sat, 11 Jun 2005 07:17:02 -0700
Reply
Science, Vol 308, Issue 5728, 1635-1638, 10 June 2005

Diversity of the Human Intestinal Microbial Flora
Paul B. Eckburg, Elisabeth M. Bik, Charles N. Bernstein, Elizabeth Purdom, Les
Dethlefsen, Michael Sargent, Steven R. Gill, Karen E. Nelson, David A. Relman1

The human endogenous intestinal microflora is an essential "organ" in providing
nourishment, regulating epithelial development, and instructing innate
immunity; yet, surprisingly, basic features remain poorly described. We
examined 13,355 prokaryotic ribosomal RNA gene sequences from multiple colonic
mucosal sites and feces of healthy subjects to improve our understanding of gut
microbial diversity. A majority of the bacterial sequences corresponded to


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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 10 Jun 2005 13:01:31 -0700
Reply
story at:

http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/2005-06-08/news/cityofwarts.html

Tom Billings
Reply
No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 10 Jun 2005 12:59:46 -0700
Reply
Most rawfooders have seen the common sprouts: alfalfa, clover,
sunflower, onion, broccoli, etc. However, a local business is
selling some less common micro-greens, or baby greens:

cilantro (coriander), sage, arugula, pepper cress,
tatsol, mizuna, pak choi

and others. It will be interesting to see ifg these catch on
and become popular.

PS methi = fenugreek leaves are also available, though they are from
mature plants and not seedlings. Once in a while lentil greens
can be found in the local markets as well.

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Beatrice Reusch
Fri, 10 Jun 2005 11:20:41 -0700
Reply
Hello,
Does anyone know whether chimpanzees eat fruits and leaves together (in
the same meal)?
And if they do, do they eat them in any particular sequence or in the
same mouthful?

Thanks.

Saaham Atman

~ who can draw a straight line between fiction and nonfiction anyway ~
Reply
No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 10 Jun 2005 08:37:29 -0700
Reply
http://curezone.com/blogs/m.asp?f=67&i=78
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 9 Jun 2005 13:10:57 -0700
Reply
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 81, No. 6, 1298-1306, June 2005

Effect of an energy-restricted, high-protein, low-fat diet relative to a
conventional high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet on weight loss, body composition,
nutritional status, and markers of cardiovascular health in obese women
Manny Noakes, Jennifer B Keogh, Paul R Foster and Peter M Clifton

Abstract
Background: Limited evidence suggests that a higher ratio of protein to
carbohydrate during weight loss has metabolic advantages.

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 9 Jun 2005 13:08:20 -0700
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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 81, No. 6, 1267-1274, June 2005

Risk of overweight and obesity among semivegetarian, lactovegetarian, and vegan
women
PK Newby, Katherine L Tucker and Alicja Wolk

Abstract
Background: Observational studies suggest that a plant-based diet is inversely
related to body mass index (BMI), overweight, and obesity.

Objective: Our objective was to examine the BMI (kg/m2) and risk of overweight
and obesity of self-defined semivegetarian, lactovegetarian, and vegan women.

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 2 Jun 2005 08:16:15 -0700
Reply
an interesting, multi-page article on chocolate at:

http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/current/news/feature_1.html

Note: The URL above might work for only a week.

Tom Billings
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 30 May 2005 09:58:44 -0700
Reply
J Med Primatol. 2005 Feb;34(1):45-9.

Fatal inflammatory heart disease in a bonobo (Pan paniscus).
Jones P, Mahamba C, Rest J, Andre C.

Abstract
We report the first probable identification of encephalomyocarditis virus
(EMCV) in a bonobo (Pan paniscus) that had been part of a forest
re-introduction programme. Clinical presentation was of episodic acute on
chronic heart failure and cerebral infarction with end-stage renal failure
rather than sudden death which is more commonly associated with EMCV infection.
A postmortem diagnosis of probable EMCV was made using gross pathological and
histopathological examination. Findings included acute on chronic heart failure
combined with the

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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 30 May 2005 09:58:07 -0700
Reply
Evolution and Human Behavior
Volume 26, Issue 2 , March 2005, Pages 206-212

Book review

In: Anne E. Russon and David R. Begun, Editors, The evolution of thought:
Evolutionary origins of great ape intelligence, Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge, UK (2002) ISBN 0521783356 394 pages, £65.00.
David C. Geary

Tom Billings
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 30 May 2005 09:57:26 -0700
Reply
Evolution and Human Behavior
Volume 26, Issue 2 , March 2005, Pages 137-157

Meat sharing for coalitional support
John Q. Patton

Abstract
In this paper, I review hypotheses about why hunters share meat, and I use
quantitative data on meat transfers between households of Achuar, Quichua, and
Zapara speakers in Conambo, an indigenous community of horticultural foragers
in the Ecuadorian Amazon, to test them. I show that meat is distributed to
political allies in Conambo and argue that meat is strategically transferred to
recruit and maintain coalitional support in a political landscape where
loyalties are shifting, crosscutting, and consequential. Additionally,

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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 30 May 2005 09:56:49 -0700
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The August 2004 issue of Behavioral and Brain Sciences has a number of articles
on the evolution of human speech, and the role of food sharing in evolution.
Some of the articles also touch on the topics of bipedalism and encephalization
(among other interesting topics).

Now for the good part: right now the whole issue is available as a free, sample
issue online. The table of contents is at:

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 29 May 2005 10:23:59 -0700
Reply
[this is my last post today]

from a recent issue of Science magazine:

Science, Vol 308, Issue 5725, 1161-1164 , 20 May 2005

The Highland Mangabey Lophocebus kipunji: A New Species of African Monkey
Trevor Jones, Carolyn L. Ehardt, Thomas M. Butynski, Tim R. B. Davenport, Noah
E. Mpunga, Sophy J. Machaga, Daniela W. De Luca

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 29 May 2005 10:22:11 -0700
Reply
misc articles of interest in Nature magazine

Book review

26 May 2005, Volume 435 Number 7041 pp385-536

A change of mind? p425
Putting evolutionary psychology to the test.
Oliver Curry reviews Adapting Minds: Evolutionary Psychology and the Persistent
Quest for Human Nature by David J. Buller

A special article on plagiarism in academia (plagiarism is common in raw):

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 29 May 2005 10:17:19 -0700
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fruit sharing for apparent social, not nutritional, purposes:

American Journal of Primatology
Volume 65, Issue 4 , Pages 385 - 391

Fruit sharing between wild adult chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii):
a socially significant event?
Katie E. Slocombe, Nicholas E. Newton-Fisher

Abstract
Although food sharing is a habitual aspect of chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes)
life, sharing of plant foods between unrelated adults is rare. Observations of
such behavior have typically been interpreted as the outcome of a process by
which individuals that are otherwise unable to gain access to the food manage
to obtain a nutritional benefit. Here we present behavioral details

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 29 May 2005 10:15:47 -0700
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an upcoming article in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology. Chimps using herbal
medicines:

Journal of Ethnopharmacology
Article in Press, Corrected Proof

Ethnomedicinal and bioactive properties of plants ingested by wild chimpanzees
in Uganda

Sabrina Kriefa, Claude Marcel Hladika, and Claudie Haxaire

Abstract

Wild chimpanzees eat several plant species claimed by traditional healers to
cure diseases. However, the behaviour leading apes to ingest these peculiar
species is not clearly understood. Some of the items consumed by chimpanzees
have low nutritional value, and there is a growing body of evidence suggesting
that health might be improved or regulated by such ingestion. Observations
concerning

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 29 May 2005 10:12:42 -0700
Reply
Gene. 2005 Feb 14;346:215-9.

Eighty percent of proteins are different between humans and chimpanzees.

Glazko G, Veeramachaneni V, Nei M, Makalowski W.

Institute of Molecular Evolutionary Genetics, Pennsylvania State University,
University Park, PA 16802, USA.

The chimpanzee is our closest living relative. The morphological differences
between the two species are so large that there is no problem in distinguishing
between them. However, the nucleotide difference between the two species is
surprisingly small. The early genome comparison by DNA hybridization techniques
suggested a nucleotide difference of 1-2%. Recently, direct nucleotide
sequencing confirmed this estimate. These findings generated the common belief
that

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 22 May 2005 11:13:39 -0700
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A milk analogue made from raw peanuts is gaining popularity here in
the San Francisco bay area, especially in the local Chinese
community. Like wheatgrass, it has numerous healing testimonials.
It is now being distributed commecially, and can be obtained at
Berkeley Bowl in Berkeley, California.

Info at:
http://peanutmilk.net/en/ <- info in english; click on button
in upper left for Chinese or Spanish.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 8 May 2005 10:26:22 -0700
Reply
the latest issue of the CRFG (California Rare Fruits Growers)
magazine features the 1st of a 3 part article on the history of
the apple. The same article reports that wild apples of Asia and
Europe were largely inedible. It seems that modern apples
are very much the result of thousand of years of plant breeding
and cultivar selection.

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 6 May 2005 08:44:51 -0700
Reply
An interesting article in the current issue of Science magazine:

Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem
Sergey A. Zimov
Science, Vol 308, Issue 5723, 796-798 , 6 May 2005

About 10,000 years ago, when the million-year-long Pleistocene epoch gave way
to the ongoing Holocene epoch, much of the world's ecosystems changed. In what
is now northern Siberia, vast numbers of large animals, among them mammoths,
woolly rhinoceroses, and yaks, both thrived on and nurtured the steppes that,
compared to other northern regions of the world, remained relatively unscathed
from the repeated advances and retreats of ice sheets. Even so,

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 5 May 2005 14:30:33 -0700
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Time for some fun. The following claims are false, yet common among the
raw/veg*n pseudoscience frauds/self-appointed "raw science experts".
[sarcasm alert]

1. (Raw) vegans don't need to take B-12 supplements.

This puts people, especially infants, at risk of deficiency. Shame on the
fakes!

2. Mother's milk is "similar to" sweet fruit, in nutritional composition.

One statistically illiterate, arrogant pseudoscience fake has produced two
elaborate "statistical" proofs for this claim. One was based on correlation,
the latest on neural networks. Both proofs are totally invalid, and are
textbook examples of BLATANT SCIENTIFIC FRAUD by a fake self-appointed
raw vegan "science expert".

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Beatrice Reusch
Wed, 4 May 2005 09:50:21 -0700
Reply
<http://www.themeatrix.com/>

Saaham Atman

~ who can draw a straight line between fiction and nonfiction anyway ~
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 1 May 2005 10:15:20 -0700
Reply
Ratio of n-6 to n-3 fatty acids and bone mineral density in older adults: the
Rancho Bernardo Study
Lauren A Weiss, Elizabeth Barrett-Connor and Denise von Mühlen

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 81, No. 4, 934-938, April 2005

Abstract:

Background: Several lines of evidence suggest that n-3 fatty acids reduce the
risk of some chronic diseases, including heart disease, diabetes, and cancer.
Other research, mainly in animals, also suggests a role in bone health.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 1 May 2005 10:07:27 -0700
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Who says global warming is all bad? Not this study which says that Eurasian
warming is making the Arabian sea more productive:

Warming of the Eurasian Landmass Is Making the Arabian Sea More Productive
Joaquim I. Goes, Prasad G. Thoppil, Helga do R Gomes, John T. Fasullo

Science, Vol 308, Issue 5721, 545-547 , 22 April 2005

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 1 May 2005 10:04:35 -0700
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A new study published in the latest issue of "Science" finds GM rice to be a
positive factor:

Insect-Resistant GM Rice in Farmers' Fields: Assessing Productivity and
Health Effects in China
Jikun Huang, Ruifa Hu, Scott Rozelle, Carl Pray

Science, Vol 308, Issue 5722, 688-690 , 29 April 2005

Abstract
Although no country to date has released a major genetically modified (GM)
food
grain crop, China is on the threshold of commercializing GM rice. This paper
studies two of the four GM varieties that are now in farm-level preproduction
trials, the last step before commercialization. Farm surveys of randomly
selected

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 28 Apr 2005 08:31:16 -0700
Reply
and she's not a raw vegan, but she likes sushi:

http://www.floridatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050428/NEWS01/504280327

Tom Billings
Reply
No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 21 Apr 2005 15:43:25 -0700
Reply
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/now/apr15/index.html

Tom Billings
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 19 Apr 2005 15:45:08 -0700
Reply
An interesting book on the topic from University of California press:

Julie Guthman

Agrarian Dreams
The Paradox of Organic Farming in California

Published August 2004
California Studies in Critical Human Geography, 11

Brief reviews:

"Agrarian Dreams throws a cold shower of reality over the dream of organic
agriculture in California, demonstrating all that is lost when organic farming
goes industrial. This is a challenging book, and until we can answer the hard
questions Julie Guthman poses, a genuinely sustainable agriculture will elude
us."--Michael Pollan, author of The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the
World

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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 18 Apr 2005 12:45:38 -0700
Reply
Here's a new book coming out in June 2005, from the University of California
Press (a not-for-profit organization), that may interest some list members:

Tending the Wild : Native American Knowledge and the Management of California's
Natural Resources (Hardcover)
by M. Kat Anderson

Description:
John Muir was an early proponent of a view we still hold today--that much of
California was pristine, untouched wilderness before the arrival of Europeans.
But as this groundbreaking book demonstrates, what Muir was really seeing when
he admired the grand vistas of Yosemite and the gold and purple flowers
carpeting the Central Valley were the

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 17 Apr 2005 10:27:23 -0700
Reply
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/04/15_indianfoods.shtml

Tom Billings
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No Replies
frieda gelber
Sun, 10 Apr 2005 18:06:32 -0700
Reply
No abstract is available available for this message. [Read Message ...]
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Show Replies 1 Reply
Kate Burton
Fri, 8 Apr 2005 09:04:07 -0400
Reply
Hello!

Does anyone know of a trauma or orthopedic surgeon who knows about the raw
vegan diet?

MY brother is a raw vegan (no meat, no dairy no cooked food - only raw
fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds)). He was in a motorcycle accident
3/30/05, and is in University of Maryland Shock Trauma with compound
fractures of pelvis and tibia. He came through the operation OK, but within
24 hours of the administration of IMPACT Glutamine he bloated up to
maximum - like a puffer fish.

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Kate Burton
Fri, 8 Apr 2005 08:58:20 -0400
Reply
Hello All!

Does anyone know of a trauma or orthopedic surgeon who know about the raw
vegan diet

Kate Burton

301.725.0177 Office
443.622.5723 Cell
301.725.0176 Fax

Heal Your Body and Immune System with Glyconutrients
www.glycoscience.org and www.nobelsugars.com for information
Call me for more information.

Best Water Filter on Planet Earth
www.thewellnessfilter.com (ID#9210266)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Debbie Maddox" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2005 10:13 PM
Subject: suggestions for a good site or book..

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Debbie Maddox
Thu, 7 Apr 2005 22:13:39 EDT
Reply
I have read several books and been on several of the "Raw" sites.. is there
one site that you all feel is the most informative about the raw life, it's
healing, and suggestions for setting up for eating raw??

Debbie Maddox
Aromatic Wings
www.aromaticwings.com
Reply
Show Replies 11 Replies
Theta Sigma
Thu, 7 Apr 2005 17:14:24 -0700
Reply
Well, yes. Once the body starts receiving good, healthy, raw foods in
the right combinations that do not cause new toxins to be created/
stored in the body, the body will be able to cleanse old toxins from the
tissues on its own, slowly - in its own good time.

If you are familiar with the term "osmosis" (and kindly pardon my
simplification) then you'll understand that, when cleansing, materials
(toxins) flow from areas of high density (e.g., tissues) to areas of low
density (e.g., colon) in an attempt to achieve equilibrium (cleansing).
This is one of the earmarks and

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 7 Apr 2005 12:35:11 -0700
Reply
The latest issue of PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, US)
has a report that concludes that ALL CYANOBACTERIA (including that expensive
stuff from Klamath Lake) has the potential to produce neurotoxins.

As the report is new, I doubt that the Klamath algae sellers are directly
testing for the listed toxin. However, their indirect (animal) tests may be a
sufficient alternative.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sat, 26 Mar 2005 16:54:55 -0800
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It might not seem so from the abstract, but the article below talks about a new
paradigm of biology based on communities and ecosystems rather than genes and
molecules.

Freeman Dyson has a 1 page review of the article cited below in the March 2005
issue of the "MIT Techonolgy Review" (p, 27). Dyson argues that once humans
dominated the earth and began modifying and controlling it, strict Darwinian
evolution ended and was replaced by cultural evolution. These articles are
interesting reads, and yet another nail in the coffins of the pro-raw
pseudoscience liars who claim cultural evolution does not

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 25 Mar 2005 08:27:17 -0800
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Today's issue of Science magazine has several articles on the human gut, the
abstract of one of which appears below. I encourage you to read the articles
and increase your knowledge in this important area.

Science, Vol 307, Issue 5717, 1915-1920 , 25 March 2005
Host-Bacterial Mutualism in the Human Intestine
Fredrik Beckhed, Ruth E. Ley, Justin L. Sonnenburg, Daniel A. Peterson, Jeffrey
I. Gordon

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 20 Mar 2005 09:27:29 -0800
Reply
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/2005-03-16/dining/sink.html

Comments:

1. These folks used to come to the Saturday Berkeley Farmer's market.
I never bought any of their dehydrated snacks as they were extremely
expensive, maybe $3-5 for a single cookie. I'm amazed that they can
get away with such high prices -- most raw fooders are not rich.

2. Note the anorexic raw vegan look in the photo.

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 17 Mar 2005 11:39:30 -0800
Reply
slightly off-topic but may interest list members nevertheless:

http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/Phys-fossil-biodiversity.html

Tom Billings
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 16 Mar 2005 07:34:13 -0800
Reply
The latest issue of "Fruit Gardener", the magazine of the California
Rare Fruit Growers (March/April 2005, vol 37, #2) has an article
re: wild strains of bananas in Borneo:

Borneo Expeditions for researching bananas
by Markku Hakkinen; pp. 14-18.

Anyway, the article has 2 photos of ripe, wild bananas on pg. 14,
and the bananas are loaded with shiny black seeds.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 13 Mar 2005 10:23:14 -0800
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Heavy metal as in music, not cadmium or mercury. :-)

The language in the link below is not suitable for children -
adults only, please.

http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/2005-03-09/dining/sink.html

Slightly off-topic, but some here will find it of interest/humorous.

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 11 Mar 2005 15:41:45 -0800
Reply
You can go to

http://www.gastrosource.com

and register for acess (free, no charge). That gives you online
access to the Jaramila Endoscopy Atlas, with lots of color photos taken
inside the colon and other parts of the digestive tract.

Note the lack of the dreaded "mucoid plaque" promoted by
people selling colon cleansing regimes.

Tom Billings
Reply
Show Replies 10 Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 1 Mar 2005 13:36:08 -0800
Reply
Interesting new paper (below). Trade, as an aspect of universal human culture,
may have served as a (buffer against) certain evolutionary selective pressures
at one point in our history. The raw vegan pseudoscience fakes who dismiss the
culture-evolution link as Lamarckism, are only fooling themselves:

How trade saved humanity from biological exclusion: an economic theory
of Neanderthal extinction

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 25 Feb 2005 09:41:37 -0800
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note the interesting remarks re: gorillas eating meat:

http://www.aaas.org/news/releases/2005/0218gorillateeth.shtml

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 17 Feb 2005 07:48:09 -0800
Reply
restaurant reviews at:

http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/2005-02-16/dining/food.html

from the above article:

"How many vegans does it take to screw in a lightbulb? It takes three: One
to do it, one to read the package very carefully, and a third to scrutinize
the proceedings with a dour expression. "

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 25 Jan 2005 07:59:52 -0800
Reply
New reserach shows that insulin is required for activation of lipid metabolism:

Published online before print January 6, 2005, 10.1073/pnas.0405067102
PNAS | January 18, 2005 | vol. 102 | no. 3 | 791-796

http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/short/102/3/791

Distinct roles of insulin and liver X receptor in the induction and cleavage of
sterol regulatory elementbinding protein-1c

Bronwyn D. Hegarty, Alexandre Bobard, Isabelle Hainault, Pascal Ferré, Pascale
Bossard and Fabienne Foufelle

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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 24 Jan 2005 08:45:50 -0800
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Here's a challenge for those who claim humans are natural frugivores:

Please list some of the peer-reviewed, scientific journal articles
that are specifically (and only) about frugivores and/or frugivory,
and for which you have read the full-text of the article(s). Specify
authors, title, journal, and other details. Also specify the date
when you first read the article. This is a test: are you
speaking from knowledge, or from ideology/religion?<br>

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 21 Jan 2005 14:41:55 -0800
Reply
Hominins, sedges, and termites: new carbon isotope data from the Sterkfontein
valley and Kruger National Park • ARTICLE

Journal of Human Evolution, In Press, Corrected Proof, Available online 18
January 2005,

Matt Sponheimer, Julia Lee-Thorp, Darryl de Ruiter, Daryl Codron, Jacqui
Codron, Alexander T. Baugh and Francis Thackeray

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_aset=B-WA-A-W-DU-MsSAYZW-UUW-AAUYEBYDVU-AAUZCAECVU-YDAUWYDAZ-DU-U&_rdoc=1&_fmt=summary&_udi=B6WJS-4F8TVVT-2&_coverDate=01%2F18%2F2005&_cdi=6886&_orig=search&_st=13&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=8ddbed7bd0c6e1ef05017efcd997f59d

Abstract

Stable carbon isotope analyses have shown that South African australopiths did
not have exclusively frugivorous diets, but also consumed significant
quantities of C4 foods such as grasses, sedges, or animals that ate these
foods. Yet, these studies have had significant limitations. For example,
hominin sample sizes were relatively small, leading

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 12 Jan 2005 10:39:11 -0800
Reply
The pseudoscience frauds make the science fiction claim that humans are
"obligate frugivores" with a natural diet that is a very high percentage of
fruit, and vegetarian too. However, those of us (like me) who have extensive
experience in climbing trees (to pick fruit) know that humans are not adapted
to tree-climbing. Even using tools, we tend to fall out of trees (I was lucky
and survived 3 bad falls).

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boat1400
Mon, 10 Jan 2005 02:33:02 -0800
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Hello,

Is it ok to chop up raw corn and just munch on that?

I am new to the whole raw food thing, and am trying to
ease my way into it, and get off the horrible diet I have
been on all my life. My brother is helping me & encouraging
me
to do this!

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 9 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0800
Reply
Previously I posted here about the latest (2004) book by Boyd &
Richerson. Turns out they have an older book on the subject:

Culture and the Evolutionary Process
1985, University of Chicago Press.

The older book is excellent as well. It is loaded with mathematical
models of evolution, in which the transmission of culture is
a system of inheritance -- one that ultimately effects survival
rates, hence is an evolutionary selective pressure in the strict
Darwinian sense.

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Jerry Story
Sat, 8 Jan 2005 13:36:08 -0500
Reply
Here is evidence that nutritional value of plants depends on quality of soil:
http://www.oeffa.org/editorscorner/rutgers/rutgers.html

Not that this conclusion is a surprise, but this study appears to provide
hard evidence.

Speculation: Could this explain why some people fail on 100% vegan and some
succeed?
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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 6 Jan 2005 07:57:24 -0800
Reply
The O Word
Kristie and Rick Knoll were early pioneers of organic farming. So why are
they now rebelling against organic?
BY WILL HARPER

Article online at:
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/current/news/feature.html

Attention: the URL above might work for only a week. After that you will
need to visit the main site and search for the article.

Print citation:
article title, author per above.
"East Bay Express" (a free weekly newspaper with an arts/entertainment
focus)
5 Jan 2005, vol. 27, #13, pp. 13-15, 17, 19-20, 22.
Published by East Bay Express Publishing,
Emeryville, California

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 5 Jan 2005 08:28:38 -0800
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Person with appendicitis given wrong & dangerous advice by a
TC Fry clone:

http://www.rawfoodsupport.com/read.php?f=12&i=47485&t=47485

Fortunateley, the person ignored the stupid advice of the Fry-bot,
got proper medical attention and is OK.

Then someone noted that liability follows along with advice, and
maybe the list moderator should do something about the bad &
dangerous medical advice freely handed out by people whose only
training is a low quality correspondence course written by TC Fry,
a high school dropout. Of course this voice of reason is
attacked by the true believers in the "one true religion and diet
of raw foods":

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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 4 Jan 2005 10:53:39 -0800
Reply
My copy of the book "Not by Genes Alone: How Culture Transformed
Human Evolution" just arrived, and I have quickly skimmed through it.

My initial impressions are that the book is well-done, thorough (30 pages of
references cited for 315 pgs of text), and very interesting. The book
presents a Darwinian analysis of the impact of culture on evolution.
The pro-raw pseudoscience frauds blatantly lie about the
culture-evolution linkage, calling it Lamarckism. This book shows
the pseudoscience types for the ignorant liars they are.

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 31 Dec 2004 09:26:48 -0800
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Here's an article that provides some detail re: the kind of analysis done in a
paper I mentioned some weeks ago. That paper analyzed the marks on bones and
concluded that humans were more predator than scavenger in prehistoric times.

Journal title: Journal of Human Evolution
Citation details: Volume 47, Issue 5 , November 2004, Pages 343-357

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 31 Dec 2004 09:24:26 -0800
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The article below is an analysis (in a non-human primate, the hyrax) that
supports the hypothesis that consumption of cooked foods was a factor in the
reduction of face size in humans during evolution. That is yet another example
of culture (cooking food) driving morphological change.

Journal title: Journal of Human Evolution
Citatin details: Volume 46, Issue 6 , June 2004, Pages 655-677

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 30 Dec 2004 09:30:36 -0800
Reply
The human mouth has a sub-optimal design when it comes to the tasks of eating
and breathing. In reality, the human mouth structure is instead optimized for
speech and language. This is well-known among legitimate scientists, but of
course the pseudoscience frauds ignore this fact. The frauds ignore the impact
of language and technology (stone tool use and cooking) on the evolution of
human oral structures. As usual, they put themselves in an IL-logical corner by
ignoring evidence, and misrepresenting current info and/or relying on outdated
old info.

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 29 Dec 2004 08:21:31 -0800
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Below is a recent article discussing insectivory among orangutans. Note that
insects are a staple in the diet rather than a fallback food. Interesting! That
chimps use tools to collect insects is common knowledge. Now it appears that
orangutans engage in insectivory where the tool-making skills are present. More
evidence against the "orangutans are natural vegetarians" claims.

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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 28 Dec 2004 08:21:18 -0800
Reply
As mentioned in a previous email, the pro-raw pseudoscience frauds
claim that humans are "naked apes, without tools". An additional
point often included in such claims is that humans are *tropical*
apes.

The pseudoscience types then claim that humans have not evolved or
adapted in any way to colder climates or meat eating, despite substantial
supporting evidence. Here the pseudoscience types not only are
ignoring evolution, but behaving like creationists.

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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 27 Dec 2004 07:57:08 -0800
Reply
I sent the article twice but never received it. It did arrive on
the website so I assume others received the email. The topic was
'capuchin monkeys can use tools, fruitarian advocates cannot'.

Sorry for any inconvenience. Have a good holiday season!

Tom Billings
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 27 Dec 2004 07:35:47 -0800
Reply
[This is a resend. Original post never arrived at my end.]

One occasionally hears certain pro-raw pseudoscience types claiming that humans
are "naked apes, without tools". This nonsense is sometimes offered in support
of the false claim that humans are natural fruitarians=obligate frugivores. Of
course, such views are merely science fiction. That non-human primates use
tools for a variety of purposes is now well-known.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 26 Dec 2004 10:35:57 -0800
Reply
One occasionally hears certain pro-raw pseudoscience types claiming that humans
are "naked apes, without tools". This nonsense is sometimes offered in support
of the false claim that humans are natural fruitarians=obligate frugivores. Of
course, such views are merely science fiction. That non-human primates use
tools for a variety of purposes is now well-known.

The article below describes the capuchin monkey using tools. (This is not the
first such article -- tool use by capuchins goes back years in the primatology
literature.) The capuchin monkey has a very small brain. Despite the handicap
in brain size, one might conclude that the

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 26 Dec 2004 10:02:46 -0800
Reply
Here's another recent reference on the culture-evolution linkage. It deals with
something even more fundamental: behavior-evolution linkage. Page 270 has a
beautiful chart that summarizes the linkages.

Journal title: The Quarterly Review of Biology
Citation details: Vol. 79, No. 3, September 2004, pp 241-278

Article title: Behavioral Syndromes: An Integrative Overview
Article authors: Andrew Sih, Alison M Bell, J Chadwick Johnson, and Robert E
Ziemba

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 26 Dec 2004 09:40:10 -0800
Reply
The URL below discusses fasting from a Buddhist monk's perspective.
Note the very interesting paragraph re: fasting was a spiritual hindrance,
not a help, to the Buddha.

I am posting this because it gives a different view on fasting and may
interest some list readers. It is not my intention to promote religion.
Those who are anti-religion might be ofended by the URL below and
should not read it.

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 26 Dec 2004 09:38:17 -0800
Reply
The pro-raw pseudoscience fakes argue that culture cannot impact evolution.
They openly lie about the culture-evolution linkage, falsely misrepresenting
the logic and calling it Lamarckism. Of course the pseudoscience types are in a
(logical) corner and have to make ridiculous and dishonest arguments, as the
culture-evolution linkage is an incredibly powerful evolutionary selective
force driving human adaptations to cooked foods and meat-eating.

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 23 Dec 2004 13:48:55 -0800
Reply
Per the 3 Dec 2004 issue of "Science" magazine (vol 306, pp. 1672-1673),
the soybean rust fungus has been found growing in the Southeastern
US. The fungus is devastating to soybeans, and may start reducing
the soybean yield in the US as early as next year. (Until this year,
the US was the only soybean producing region that was rust-free. The
USDA has been researching rust for years, so no one was caught unaware.)

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 22 Dec 2004 08:52:51 -0800
Reply
two parts of the book are online at:

Part 1: http://www.quisqualis.com/tvPEFCvr.html
Part 2: http://www.quisqualis.com/tvPEFC2P012.html

[The entire book is not online -- yet.]

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 20 Dec 2004 08:31:04 -0800
Reply
A non-technical explanation:

http://tinyurl.com/6oz68

The article abstract:

http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/0408118101v1

The new research explains how morphological evolution can occur very
rapidly.

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 19 Dec 2004 07:19:44 -0800
Reply
an excellent article on primate carnivory:

http://www.curtbusse.com/pubs/HamiltonBusse1978.html

The article is dated in the sense that it was written in 1978.
However, research since then has further confirmed the
paper's findings. See. e.g., the research of Craig Stanford
and Christpher Boesch.

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 12 Dec 2004 08:02:06 -0800
Reply
Some vegetarian writers try to rationalize away humanity's evolutionary
past as hunter-gatherers by claiming that prehistoric humans were at best
occasional scavengers and poor hunters. A recent review article torpedos
such claims for the nonsense they are.

"Early hominid hunting and scavenging: a zooarcheological review"
M. Dominguez-Rodrigo, T.R. Pickering
Evolutionary Anthropology
2003, vol. 12, 275-282

>From p. 281:

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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 10 Dec 2004 12:38:26 -0800
Reply
You might be aware that the patent system is subject to abuse,
and that people are filing bogus and ridiculous patent applications.

The link below is to a patent application in Australia that is
trying to patent: dehydrating, sprouting, blending of
raw foods. Let's hope the Australian patent office rejects
the application...

http://pericles.ipaustralia.gov.au/aub/pdf/nps/2004/0902/2004100620A4/2004100620.pdf

Tom Billings
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Show Replies 2 Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 3 Dec 2004 08:32:46 -0800
Reply
an interesting article on the fruit hybridization business is at
fortune.com. To read the entire article, go to:

http://www.cnn.com

and scroll to the bottom, use link under "Fortune" magazine,
article title "Is Designer Fruit the next big thing?".

You can access it directly through fortune.com, but unless you
are a subscriber, you might only get to read half the article.
The access route above - via cnn.com, lets you read the whole
article for free.

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dude
Mon, 29 Nov 2004 02:08:43 -0500
Reply
Hi all,
I am very interested in obtaining a copy of the pre-1999 archives. Would
anyone be able to e-mail them to me? I remember there was a lot of good
info in them (especially on instincto stuff) but they have disappeared and
now I am sad. I have been a rawer (rawpaleo type RVAF) for around four
years and have never posted here but I have enjoyed reading the
discussions and I have learned a lot from this list.
Thanks,
Charles
Reply
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 28 Nov 2004 09:30:48 -0800
Reply
for those folks who believe (incorrectly) that wild animals never
get sick:

http://www.floridatoday.com/!NEWSROOM/localstoryN1128DOLPHIN.htm

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 19 Nov 2004 09:30:41 -0800
Reply
http://scholar.google.com

includes PubMed and many online article archives. Does not include
many other important online databases like BioSis, Agricola,
ANTH, etc.

Still, it's a tool worth trying. One issue: most of the links
require payment - limited free content as most academic
articles require subscription or per-article fee payment.
These per-article fees range from $10-50 or more, depending on the greed
of the publisher.

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Thomas E. Billings
Thu, 18 Nov 2004 09:21:10 -0800
Reply
"Born to run" and not "born to climb trees and pick fruit". New evidence
that the fully upright bipedal posture reduces human's abilities to climb
trees.

Yahoo News report based on an article that appears in the current "Nature"
magazine:

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=570&u=/nm/20041117/sc_nm/science_running_dc_3&printer=1

Here's a short intro on the Nature website:

http://www.nature.com/nature/links/041118/041118-1.html

and the article summary:

http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v432/n7015/abs/nature03052_fs.html&dynoptions=doi1100793286

Full text of the article is on the Nature website - for subscribers,
those with proxy access, andfor purchase by all others.

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François Dovat
Fri, 8 Oct 2004 09:37:09 +0200
Reply
http://www.mayo.edu/proceedings/2004/jan/7901r3.pdf

Quote:

Our genetic make-up, shaped through millions of years of
evolution, determines our nutritional and activity needs.
Although the human genome has remained primarily unchanged
since the agricultural revolution 10,000 years ago,
our diet and lifestyle have become progressively more divergent
from those of our ancient ancestors. Accumulating
evidence suggests that this mismatch between our modern
diet and lifestyle and our Paleolithic genome is playing a
substantial role in the ongoing epidemics of obesity, hypertension,
diabetes, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
Until 500 generations ago, all humans consumed only
wild and unprocessed food foraged and hunted from their
environment. These

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Beatrice Reusch
Mon, 4 Oct 2004 09:01:43 -0700
Reply
Along with their book, I received some -- EXPENSIVE -- pieces of durian
from the authors of Genefit Nutrition, Devivo & Spors. Quite different
from eating fresh, whole, living durian, indeed; more like eating
candy. Personally, I did not experience any of the positive effects I
feel after eating fresh durian. I have not tried the seeds yet, though;
I figure they must be good.

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* *
Sat, 2 Oct 2004 15:00:21 EDT
Reply
--- In [log in to unmask], "Steve" <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
Here in Arizona, we hold raw retreats at the Hot
Springs in southeastern Arizona.

And occasionally, we've invited David WereWolfe
and his entourage to be the guests of honor. (And
he's paid handsomely for his efforts.)

Earlier this year, we invited him and his followers
to our retreat, and in the days immediately after
our retreat, he held one of his own. (Which seemed
a little sleazy to me; as we invited him and he takes
full advantage of our hospitality by hosting his own
retreat right after ours? As in, why go to

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Beatrice Reusch
Sun, 22 Aug 2004 10:55:12 -0700
Reply
Many thanks, Jean-Claude for describing the sapote nail test.

Now, here is my next dumb question to the list members:
For someone living in California, is there a way to get fresh, not
frozen, durians preferably from Malaysia or Vietnam, but if they must
come from Thailand so be it.

Thanks.

Beatrice
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Beatrice Reusch
Fri, 20 Aug 2004 17:33:26 -0700
Reply
Hello,

Please excuse my ignorance: how can I tell when a mamey sapote is ripe?

Thanks.

Beatrice
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Thomas E. Billings
Mon, 9 Aug 2004 09:34:57 -0700
Reply
"Nature boy" Gypsy Boots, featured in the raw food anthology "Children
of the Sun", passed away recently. Details at:

http://www.rawfood.com/forum/ultimatebb.php?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=003673

Tom Billings
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-
Sat, 7 Aug 2004 19:34:55 -0400
Reply
Does anyone on this list know the relative merits of flax seeds vs.
flaxseed oil?

I have extremely dry eyes and when I went to see an ophthalmologist today,
he recommended taking 1000 mg of flax seed oil twice/day. According to a
study he cited of 300 patients with dry eyes treated with flaxseed oil, 85%
had total relief of their symptoms.

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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 27 Jul 2004 08:21:08 -0700
Reply
Article online, part of the 3rd issue of the new online tropical fruit
magazine:

http://www.quisqualis.com/avoadpknight.html

PS suggest you read it ASAP, as the URL may be restricted to subscribers
only in the near future. If the above does not work, try www.quisqualis.com,
scroll down to online magazine, look for 3rd issue URL.

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 9 Jul 2004 12:38:51 -0700
Reply
Japanese or Okinawan longevity is sometimes discussed by
raw/vegan advocates. They claim that the diet is near-vegetarian
and the longevity is due to eating so little animal protein.

The article below points out that longevity depends on many
factors, but that the Japanese diet has shown increased
longevity and increased animal protein consumption, in the same
timespan.

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 7 Jul 2004 12:12:22 -0700
Reply
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/a/2004/07/07/international0636EDT0500.DTL
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 4 Jul 2004 08:18:10 -0700
Reply
Photos of avocado cultivars grown in Kona, Hawaii:

http://www.hawaiifruit.net/avocado.jpg
http://www.hawaiifruit.net/avo2.jpg

New online tropical fruit magazine: (scroll down page for links)

http://www.quisqualis.com/

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 4 Jul 2004 08:16:12 -0700
Reply
poking fun at diets:

http://www.fortune.com/fortune/bing/0,15704,657992,00.html

from the article:

"Everywhere you go these days, people are doing two things: getting fatter
and dieting. One can only conclude that the more one diets, the fatter one
gets."

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 29 Jun 2004 10:04:12 -0700
Reply
TCM (traditional Chinese medicine) uses the herb yu xing cao,
Latin name Houttuynia cordata, in raw form as an anti-tumor
medicine.

The herb is available, fresh and raw, in some Chinese and Vietnamese
stores here on the West coast of the US. [It is in stock right now in
certain Oakland, California Chinatown food stores.]

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 27 Jun 2004 09:48:48 -0700
Reply
http://www.amazonflora.com/index.htm
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Jerry Story
Sun, 27 Jun 2004 01:55:13 -0500
Reply
Here is a free 47 page book that criticizes the Dr. Atkins type of diet.
http://www.atkinsfacts.org/pdf/atkins-facts.pdf
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Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 25 Jun 2004 16:12:56 -0700
Reply
http://www.floridatoday.com/!NEWSROOM/localstoryN0624DOLPHINS.htm
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Thomas E. Billings
Tue, 15 Jun 2004 07:29:28 -0700
Reply
a newly developed low-carb potato, non-GMO, will be available in the US
market next year:

http://www.healthday.com/view.cfm?id=519486

Tom Billings
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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 9 Jun 2004 11:39:35 -0700
Reply
an interesting article from the current issue of "Harvard Magazine"
that discusses America's dietary habits, including a short discussion
of Wrangham's research indicating that humans are naturally adapted to a
cooked food diet:

http://www.harvard-magazine.com/on-line/050465.html

and here's a supporting/background article on Wrangham's research
from an earlier issue:

http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/1100110.html

PS Some raw vegan advocates have attacked Wrangham's research -- even though
it appears that they haven't even read the published journal articles! This
intellectually dishonest practice is standard behavior for some raw vegan
promoters, in particular the raw vegan pseudoscience fakes. (Many of the
raw vegan pseudoscience promoters have no credentials or

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Thomas E. Billings
Sun, 6 Jun 2004 11:23:36 -0700
Reply
UC Berkeley PR office announcement:

http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2004/06/01_usdiet.shtml

Abstract of published scientific article on ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
website:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6WJH-4CG7FR0-J&_coverDate=08%2F31%2F2004&_alid=177299208&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_qd=1&_cdi=6879&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=53af508cac23f727041c9eab130a4ad0

Tom Billings
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No Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Fri, 4 Jun 2004 08:29:35 -0700
Reply
http://www.rawfood.com/forum/ultimatebb.php?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=002924
Reply
Show Replies 4 Replies
Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 2 Jun 2004 15:10:22 -0700
Reply
Viktoras comments on Nazariah's letter:

http://www.rawfoodsupport.com/read.php?f=12&i=15715&t=15715

In my opinion:
Viktoras' reply contains the usual doublespeak. He seems to be admitting
that raw vegan is not working well for him. He has to take algae and
enzymes (supplements and superfoods -- all highly processed industrial
products) and yet success is still elusive for him. Despite this,
he still defends raw diets! Some people never learn - especially
when their income comes from promoting a deficient diet. Last time
I saw Viktoras, he looked like "death warmed over" -- heavily
wrinkled and dehydrated.

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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 2 Jun 2004 13:11:43 -0700
Reply
http://www.pacific.net.sg/article.php?id=344246
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Thomas E. Billings
Wed, 2 Jun 2004 13:08:37 -0700
Reply
David Wolfe reports that typical raw vegan diets are deficient and often
fail (he is critical of natural-hygiene-style diets), but that raw vegan
diets with added supplements and (high priced) superfoods have a
better chance of success:

http://www.fredericpatenaude.com/interview-wolfe.html

Of course, if raw vegan diets are "most natural" then one would not expect
to need supplements or superfoods on such diets. Wolfe is not alone in
pushing supplements and superfoods - Viktoras, Cousens and Clement/
Hippocrates promote them, even Ann Wigmore if you count wheatgrass
as a superfood.

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