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6 mo. ago

  • Does the "us" in the graph imply that carnists lost a significant amt of brain size?

  • I see also you have cranked up a few side accounts to upvote yourself.

    lmao got me Mr. Soft Rock 🤡

    I will just leave this without further comment, people reading your "contributions" can make up their own mind as to your credibility and whether or not it is I who has the agenda.

    Edit: For people actually interested in the science, here's an interesting example of what opportunistic-carnivorous feeding would've looked like -- underscoring the absurdity of talking about meat-eating in terms of preference in an anthropological/survival context.

  • science @lemmy.world

    Molecular Mechanisms of Neuroprotection by Ketone Bodies and Ketogenic Diet in Cerebral Ischemia and Neurodegenerative Diseases

    science @lemmy.world

    New evidence suggests megaflood refilled the Mediterranean Sea five million years ago

    science @lemmy.world

    Intermittent Fasting May Improve Memory, Executive Function, Early Trial Suggests

    science @lemmy.world

    Australopithecus at Sterkfontein did not consume substantial mammalian meat

    science @lemmy.world

    Study explains early humans ate starch — and why it matters

  • Indeed. Mine include having a MSc. in Molecular Biology, yours, trolling on the internet

  • I just fail to see how eating meat is an inherent "preference" while eating plants is "opportunistic". Seems like a false dichotomy

  • ITER, set to be the largest fusion reactor ever built, will be a tokamak.

  • Terribly reductive take. There's a myriad of different edible plant species, variably digestible and non-digestible for different species. This article outlines how the reconstructed mouth microbiom of human ancestors as far back as 100'000 years ago was already capable of breaking down starchy foods. With the advent of fire, those would've been cooked just like meats and would've facilitated a growth in brain all the same, while being more reliable a food source.

  • science @lemmy.world

    Three Million Years Ago, Our Ancestors Were Vegetarian