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Date: | Mon, 29 Dec 1997 13:50:35 -0500 |
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> Accepting the genetic evidence for a bottleneck mentioned
> above leads us acceptance an Out Of Africa II scenario rather than a
> Multiregional Evolution scenario for the origin of modern humans, and thus
> to place the dispersal event of interest at c.120-100ka.
>I find this extremely important, and it raises a lot of questions on how to
>determine what food is suited for humans and what is not.
>(Shouldn´t it be: Naked, _in_Africa_ with just a stick and a stone?)
>And what about cabbage that stems from european seashores? Beeing a european
>myself, my ancestors may have eaten it some 30 kya,or perhaps only for a few
>thousand years.
there's evidence of hominid occupation in the british isles as early as
400,000 years ago, in the time period between ice ages. but we have no way
of knowing what food was native to britain at that time, or even if we knew
what the climate was and what was growing, do we know that humans actually
ate it? or do we ever really *know* what part of the world our remote
ancestors lived in? humans have been migrating around the earth for
countless millenia, and most likely interbreeding along the way.
i'll settle for _Naked with a sharp stick_
JoAnn.
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