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Tuesday, June 01, 2010

Early Humans Had “Brain Food,” Too

From George Washington University

A team of scientists now know what may have helped fuel the evolution of the human brain two million years ago.  Archeologists working in Kenya unearthed evidence that our human ancestors ate a wide variety of animals including fish, turtles and even crocodiles.  Based on analyses of animal bones and stone tools they excavated, the research team found that our early ancestors incorporated aquatic “brain food” in their diet.

“These aquatic foods are really important sources of the long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids and docosahexaenoic acid that are so critical to human brain growth,” said co-author and paleoanthropologist Dr. Richmond.

Because growing a large brain requires an enormous investment in calories and nutrients, anthropologists have long considered meat in the diet as key to the evolution of a larger brain.  Until now, there was no evidence that human ancestors had incorporated animal foods into their diets this long ago.

Scientists excavated literally thousands of fossilized bones and stone tools, and were able to determine that at least 10 individual animals, and perhaps many more, were butchered by early humans at a 1.95 million year-old site in northwestern Kenya.  Many of these bones showed evidence of cut marks made by early human ancestors as a result of using sharp stone tools to cut meat from the bones or crush long bones to access the fat-rich bone marrow

“At sites of this age we often consider ourselves lucky if we find any bone associated with stone tools, but here we found everything from small bird bones to hippopotamus leg bones,” said archeologist David Braun of the University of Cape Town in South Africa, who was the lead author on the research.

Read the full news release from George Washington University here.

Posted by Thom Canalichio on 06/01/10 at 10:28 AM

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