Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Did cooking help to make us human?


The BBC has a fascinating article speculating that the development of cooking helped our ancestors develop into the human species we've become today. Here's an extract.

It is already accepted that the introduction of meat into our ancestors' diet caused their brains to grow and their intelligence to increase.

Meat - a more concentrated form of energy - not only meant bigger brains for our ancestors, but also an end to the need to devote nearly all their time to foraging to maintain energy levels.

As a consequence, more time was available for social structure to develop.

Harvard Professor Richard Wrangham believes there is more to it than simply discovering meat.

He thinks that it is not so much a change in the ingredients of our diet, but the way in which we prepare them that has caused the radical evolution of our species.

"I think cooking is arguably the biggest increase in the quality of the diet in the whole of the history of life," he says.

"Our ancestors most probably dropped food in fire accidently. They would have found it was delicious and that set us off on a whole new direction."

To understand how and when our bodies changed, we need to take a closer look at what our ancestors ate by studying the fossil records.

Our earliest ancestor was the ape-like Australopithecus.

Australopithecus had a large belly containing a big large-intestine, essential to digest the robust plant matter, and had large, flat teeth which it used for grinding and crushing tough vegetation.

None the less, it was Australopithecus that moved out of the trees and onto the African savannah, and started to eat the animals that grazed there.

And it was this change of habitat, lifestyle and diet that also prompted major changes in anatomy.

The eating of meat ties in with an evolutionary shift 2.3 million years ago resulting in a more human-looking ancestor with sharper teeth and a 30% bigger brain, called Homo habilis.

The most momentous shift however, happened 1.8 million years ago when Homo erectus - our first "truly human" ancestor arrived on the scene.

Homo erectus had an even bigger brain, smaller jaws and teeth.

Erectus also had a similar body shape to us. Shorter arms and longer legs appeared, and gone was the large vegetable-processing gut, meaning that Erectus could not only walk upright, but could also run.

He was cleverer and faster, and - according to Professor Wrangham - he had learned how to cook.

"Cooking made our guts smaller," he says. "Once we cooked our food, we didn't need big guts.

"They're costly in terms of energy. Individuals that were born with small guts were able to save energy, have more babies and survive better."

Professor Peter Wheeler from Liverpool John Moores University and his colleague, Leslie Aiello, think it was this change in our digestive system that specifically allowed our brains to get larger.

Cooking food breaks down its cells, meaning that our stomachs need to do less work to liberate the nutrients our bodies need.

This, says Wheeler, "freed up energy which could then be used to power a larger brain. The increase in brain-size mirrors the reduction in the size of the gut."

Significantly Wheeler and Aiello found that the reduction in the size of our digestive system was exactly the same amount that our brains grew by - 20%.

Professor Stephen Secor at the University of Alabama found that not only does cooked food release more energy, but the body uses less energy in digesting it.

. . .

So being human might all be down to energy.

Cooking is essentially a form of pre-digestion, which has transferred energy use from our guts to our brains.

According to Professors Wheeler and Wrangham and their colleagues, it is no coincidence that humans - the cleverest species on earth - are also the only species that cooks.


There's more at the link.

Most interesting . . . Now, what contribution was made to human development by the discovery that beer goes well with fire-broiled meat?



Peter

5 comments:

  1. Now, what contribution was made to human development by the discovery that beer goes well with fire-broiled meat?

    Civilization on a large scale. Seriously; it used to be that control of water-borne bugs, which are endemic to any city without a full understanding of sanitation, was accomplished via the population drinking beer and wine the way we drink tapwater. It was often heavily watered down, but it was enough to at least partially sanitize the beverage.

    Alcohol is better for you than cholera.

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  2. The temps are supposed to reach 50 this weekend. I'm going to grill some steaks and experiment about Professors Wheeler and Wrangham's hypothesis.

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  3. Got a coupla problems with the article:

    1) the Australopithicines were, at best, bipedal chimps. Any meat eating was scavenged for the most part.

    2) I have to disagree with my betters: Homo Habilis is a transitional form on the way to Erectus, not a separate species.

    The sea cores off the east coast of Africa show a dizzying fluctuation between arid and lacustrine climates during the transition from A. Afarensis (et al) to Homo. It's going to be hard to document that, as there is a half-million year gap in the fossil record.

    And, as a South African, you can be proud of the fact that while the BBQ was invented elsewhere, the Surf 'n Turf was invented in SA.

    :D

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  4. Raw meat frequently contains parasites. Cooked meat contains dead parasites, which are less harmful to the eater. Hence one might expect an eater of cooked meat to live longer.

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  5. I was thinking that cooked meat probably lasts longer without spoiling so it could have started that way.

    Also, boiling up bones and scraps can get the last bits of nutrition out of those along with being better for the sick.

    I think there are any number of ways they might have stumbled on the idea.

    MechAg94

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