It's been a long time since I read this book as a an economics/anthropology student, but it had a big impact on me. The essays...
The 10,000 Year Explosion
I just finished The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution by Gregory Cochran and Henry Harpending. It's an interesting book, but ultimately hard to review because much of it seems like smattering of anecdotes and speculation. At its cores it attacks the idea that humans haven't changed much since the paleolithic and that the reason our world has changed is because of culture, not genetic change. It's a popular idea and one that's unfortunately associated with evolutionary nutrition.
I see time and time again this idea that evolutionary nutrition works because we are the same as our ancestors. We aren't the same. As this book points out, genome sequencing shows that the change over the past few thousand years is far greater than this long term rate over the past few million years, on the order of 100 times greater. More controversially, this book argues that the change hasn't been uniform and that there are significant differences between human populations.
This book will upset blank slaters who want to believe that human differences are only skin deep more than it will upset paleo dieters. Why would genes for skin color and nose shape be selected for, and not those for cognitive capacities and digestion of novel foods?
What if we had a time machine and kidnapped a human baby from Stone Age Africa and raised him? Would that baby look, think, or act like a modern human?
Unfortunately the baby would probably die pretty young. Probably because of human leukocyte antigen, which has been under strong selection from the advent of agriculture. If you are reading this your ancestors way back were probably Middle Eastern or Asian farmers. Their lives sucked. They toiled as serfs day after day. They ate gruel and slept amongst their dirty livestock. They got sick constantly. Many of them died, but some with robust immune systems survived.
By the time we get to the Age of Exploration, their human leukocyte antigens are quite diverse. Which is important, because human leukocyte antigen protects us from disease. Unfortunately they carried those diseases they were at least somewhat protected from over the ocean to a population that had diverged before the advent of animal agriculture (though they had developed their own agriculture). As explained eloquently in Guns, Germs, and Steel, the Amerindians didn't have much good animal stock to draw from when inventing their own forms of agriculture. The germs Europeans brought over killed about 90% of this population.
Other allelles that have been under modern selection are those for serotonin receptors, axon growth, synapse formation, layers of cerbral cortex, and brain growth. And that's just what we know about so far. I have some doubt that the baby would have an easy time with our educational and economic system.
This book also delves into some differences between ethnic populations, particularly the Ashkenazi Jews, which are quite controversial. Even more controversial perhaps is the idea of human domestication. After the advent of agriculture, did elites "domesticate" their peasants through culling/executions/arranging marriages? It's an intriguing idea, but I think the effect is quite limited for reasons I will outline in a future post on agricultural regression. Their other theory that the "bourgeois virtues" have some genetic component seems more realistic to me, but then again it seems most evidence for or against is still mostly in the hypothesis stage, though there have been some tantalizing studies.
Where does that leave the paleo diet? I think it still stands as a valid concept. Start at the beginning and let self-experimentation and science flesh out the rest. Few "paleo dieters" are eating anything that looks much like what we would have eaten in the paleolithic. That's because it's about the premises, not the foods. Paleo diet is about looking at idea, such as the common misconception that saturated fat is bad for us, and asking if it makes since from an evolutionary perspective. I think this evolutionary approach to nutrition will improve as genetic tests do, but right now it's mainly to self-experimentation with a little speculation.
Some known "recent" genetic mutations and population differences in the book related to food include:
- A gene for salt conservation common in Tropical Africa, but not Eurasia
- Lactase persistence
- TCF7L2 gene variants connected to metabolism, particularly to the pathogenesis of diabetes
- Processing of alcohol, which leds to variable risks for fetal alcohol syndrome between populations
- A fairly rare ApoA-I mutation ( ApoA-Im), which makes its carriers process cholesterol more efficiently
Many of these are connected to ethnicity. Recently I was discussing salt with a friend of Tropical African decent. He said that even cooking with salt at home (the use of salt at home is trivial compared to that used in restaurants or in processed foods) made his blood pressure rise dangerously. For me, if I don't cook with salt my blood pressure gets quite low. I imagine my ancestors on the windy coast of Scotland would have not survived if their salted meat and fish that they relied on had such an effect.
Much of this book is speculation, but much of what went to press in 2009 has turned out to be true. The idea that humans hybridized with neanderthals, for example, has turned out to have a strong scientific basis.
But they hypothesize that the 7R allele of the dopamine D4 receptor, which is thought to be related to the ADHD, was related to farming, when really it seems more related to migration. An interesting take away from the linked paper, Population Migration and the Variation of Dopamine D4 Receptor (DRD4) Allele Frequencies Around the Globe, is that cultures sometimes portrayed as being "wild" have low incidence of this allele.
I guess that brings me to say that this book is very interesting and thought provoking, but it lacks a core to really evaluate for a review. I know a lot of bloggers who have read this book and most of them haven't reviewed it.
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Instead of the "DNA did not
Instead of the "DNA did not change" approach. I prefer the tack taken by Staffan Lindeberg in his book, "Food and Western Disease"
From 1920 to 1960, the diet and medical condition of 189 hunter gatherer tribes were documented. These tribes were from all over the world and untouched by Western food and lifestyle. All of these tribes were also untouched by heart disease, cancer, diabetes, auto-immune disease, and obesity.
All of these tribes had one thing in common, they did not eat:
1. Sugar
2. dairy
3. grains
4. legumes
5. refined vegetable oils
He uses these 189 tribes to justify a paleo lifestyle.
Hi Melissa, I think you've
Hi Melissa,
I think you've convinced me to put this book on my list -- somewhere below the Little House Cookbook. :)
According to John Taylor Gatto's nine years of historical research into the foundations of the American public education system (and he was NY State Teacher of the Year!), compulsory public education began in Massachuetts in 1852, and was made mandatory in the last of the 48 states 66 years later in 1918.
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/chapters/5i.htm
Within Massachusetts, an estimated 80% of the population resisted public schooling, often with guns. The last outpost on Cape Cod was not conquered until the 1880s, three decades after the law was enacted, when the children were seized and marched to school by orders of the militia.
http://tinyurl.com/37qz9x4
If he is correct, I doubt that genetic variation accounts for the modern acceptance of public schooling. I think it is more likely a cultural effect due to mass media, which began with public school, culminated with television, and is currently being broken apart by the internet.
I won't get a chance to read 10,000 years for a while -- could you summarize the method by which he estimates the rate of genetic change before the 10K year mark and separates it from the rate after the 10K year mark?
Thanks!
Chris
I keep meaning to answer your
I keep meaning to answer your question, but I'm not done reading the paper it was based on.
But John Hawks, who is one of the paper's authors, explains it pretty well in a blog post
http://johnhawks.net/weblog/topics/evolution/selection/acceleration/acce...
Great info about public schools :) I'm convinced that our unfortunate domestication is not genetic, which is good because then it's more easily reversed.
http://planetsave.com/2010/11
http://planetsave.com/2010/11/04/modern-humans-emerged-in-east-asia-much...
The direct coincidence of
The direct coincidence of DRD4 allele propagation and the hypothesized out-of-Africa migration is definitely interesting. So many of the studies are funded specifically for ADHD research that it's kind of difficult to get articles without that bias. I referenced 3 more-recent (2004-2009) studies in my post about the 'adventure gene'.
From a paleo diet perspective, it's important to keep in mind that the length of time any food has been ingested by humans is irrelevant unless it provides significant reproductive advantage (or disadvantage), and meets a favorable mutation that can be selected for, and actually undergoes selection. It's easy for laymen exorphin apologists to take, "genome sequencing shows that the change over the past few thousand years is far greater," out of context and extend it haphazardly to gastrointestinal phenotypes.
I grow weary of arguments like... "but my ancestors have been eating pasta [or whatever] for generations, so they've certainly adapted by now". Well... no, not necessarily any more than they would have adapted to extract nutritional value from glass marbles consumed over the same timeframe.
The level of significant reproductive advantage/disadvantage of grain components isn't even known for modern populations, so projecting this back 10K years is problematic. It gets even murkier when we consider that gluten content has also been under artificial selection by humans for that same period.
In other words, even if the genome has changed drastically, we have no reason to believe it's impacted humans' ability to override the chemical defenses of grains, legumes, et cetera until we know more about what the genes influence. The increased awareness of gluten sensitivity and intolerance even in non-celiac individuals is reason enough to question assumptions of adaptation.
I think we can all see how much easier it would be to make a case for the reproductive advantages of alcohol processing. Beer goggles anyone? :)