I am still not satisfied with suggestions that humans do not eat grass:
At 12:18 1998-08-01 -0700, Dave Chapman wrote (Re: [P-F] Lewis & Clark IV):
>Tuesday July 16th 1805
>Drewyer killed a buffaloe this morning near the river and we halted and
>breakfasted on it. here for the first time I ate of the small guts of the
>buffaloe cooked over a blazing fire in the Indian stile without any
>preparation of washing or other clensing and found them very good.
Eating small guts from ruminants does shurely involve eating grass, and
in a form where it is probably more digestible for humans.
I am quite shure this has been a usual food for our ancestors on
the paleolitic savanna. Also I guess that we are adopted to the small
amounts of grass proteins eaten this way.
Comments are welcome...
- Hans