2000
DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/71.3.682
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Plant-animal subsistence ratios and macronutrient energy estimations in worldwide hunter-gatherer diets

Abstract: Both anthropologists and nutritionists have long recognized that the diets of modern-day hunter-gatherers may represent a reference standard for modern human nutrition and a model for defense against certain diseases of affluence. Because the hunter-gatherer way of life is now probably extinct in its purely un-Westernized form, nutritionists and anthropologists must rely on indirect procedures to reconstruct the traditional diet of preagricultural humans. In this analysis, we incorporate the most recent ethnog… Show more

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Cited by 643 publications
(499 citation statements)
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“…When the two polar hunter-gatherer populations, who have no choice but to eat animal food because of the inaccessibility of plant foods, are excluded from Table 1, the mean score for animal subsistence is 59% and that for plant food subsistence is 41%. These animal to plant subsistence values fall within the same respective class intervals (56 -65% for animal food; 36 -45% for plant food) as those we estimated from the ethnographic data when the confounding influence of latitude was eliminated (Cordain et al, 2000a). Consequently, there is remarkably close agreement between the quantitative data in Table 1 and the ethnographic data.…”
Section: Quantitative Studies Of Hunter-gatherer Dietssupporting
confidence: 74%
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“…When the two polar hunter-gatherer populations, who have no choice but to eat animal food because of the inaccessibility of plant foods, are excluded from Table 1, the mean score for animal subsistence is 59% and that for plant food subsistence is 41%. These animal to plant subsistence values fall within the same respective class intervals (56 -65% for animal food; 36 -45% for plant food) as those we estimated from the ethnographic data when the confounding influence of latitude was eliminated (Cordain et al, 2000a). Consequently, there is remarkably close agreement between the quantitative data in Table 1 and the ethnographic data.…”
Section: Quantitative Studies Of Hunter-gatherer Dietssupporting
confidence: 74%
“…Because smaller animal species have less body fat than larger species, their carcasses contain relatively more protein as a percentage of their available food energy (Figure 3). The nature of this relationship is virtually identical among all vertebrates (Cordain et al, 2000a) and is exemplified by the cubic polynomial equation in Figure 4. Hunter-gatherers tended to shun very small animals or fat-depleted animals because of their excessive protein content (Noli & Avery, 1988;Speth & Spielmann, 1983;Speth, 1989), and numerous historical and ethnographic accounts have documented the adverse health effects that have occurred when people were forced to rely solely upon the fat depleted lean meat of wild animals (Speth & Spielmann, 1983).…”
Section: Meat-based Hunter-gatherer Diets L Cordain Et Almentioning
confidence: 92%
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