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Medical Forum / General / Nutrition / September 2006

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Scientists:   humans may be plant eaters, genetically

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Steve - 31 Aug 2006 18:02 GMT
Liver studies hint vegies suit humans
31 August 2006

Scientists studying kidney-stone diseases have stumbled across evidence
that humans may be genetically more suited to vegetarianism than meat
eating.

The discovery was made when the placement of an enzyme known as AGT,
which is linked to the rare kidney-stone disease PH1, was found in one
area of the liver in herbivores and another in carnivores, Professor
Chris Danpure, of University College London, said yesterday.

Evolutionary science indicated that about 10 million years ago the
distribution of the enzyme in human ancestors appeared to change from
favouring a omnivorous diet to plant eating.

Humans began eating meat only in the past 100,000 years, a habit which
has increased dramatically in recent times.

"It would appear that the diet we have now is incompatible with the
distribution of this enzyme, which was designed for a herbivore diet,
not meat eating," he said.

Read the rest:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3781716a7144,00.html
TC - 31 Aug 2006 18:57 GMT
> Liver studies hint vegies suit humans
> 31 August 2006
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
> distribution of the enzyme in human ancestors appeared to change from
> favouring a omnivorous diet to plant eating.

> Humans began eating meat only in the past 100,000 years, a habit which
> has increased dramatically in recent times.

Huh? Are you out of your mind? What? They did not hunt, trap or
scavenge any animals at all? What a bunch of garbage.

> "It would appear that the diet we have now is incompatible with the
> distribution of this enzyme, which was designed for a herbivore diet,
> not meat eating," he said.
>
> Read the rest:
> http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3781716a7144,00.html

Absolute nonsense.

TC
Leonardo - 03 Sep 2006 03:47 GMT
> Evolutionary science indicated that about 10 million years ago the
> distribution of the enzyme in human ancestors appeared to change from
> favouring a omnivorous diet to plant eating.

> Humans began eating meat only in the past 100,000 years, a habit which
> has increased dramatically in recent times.

Sorry but this is complete BS. Humans have been consuming meat for
approximately 2 million years or so. Refer to h. habilis.

> "It would appear that the diet we have now is incompatible with the
> distribution of this enzyme, which was designed for a herbivore diet,
> not meat eating," he said.

Humans have the digestive enzymes required to digest meat (but
interestingly not cellulose). We are omnivores. Whether you care to
believe it or not is up to you.

> Read the rest:
> http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3781716a7144,00.html

If I feel the need for some fiction I shall.

L
Mr. Natural-Health - 04 Sep 2006 06:42 GMT
> Evolutionary science indicated that about 10 million years ago the
> distribution of the enzyme in human ancestors appeared to change from
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> distribution of this enzyme, which was designed for a herbivore diet,
> not meat eating," he said.

Well, then perhaps that explains why TC walks upright?

He obvioulsy has a bug up his Arse.  Ha, ... Hah, Ha!

Another slow news day for the scientists?

Man is a plant eater.  He definitely needs fiber in his diet.  He also
needs some meat, too.  So, I vote for an omnivorous diet.  Man has a
lot of screwy genetics, like no vitamin C.  So, what does that prove?
 
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