Survival of the Fattest: The Key to Human Brain Evolution

Bibliographic Collection: 
Anthropogeny
Publication Type: Book
Authors: Cunnane, Stephen C.
Year of Publication: 2005
Number of Pages: 343
Publisher: World Scientific
City: Hackensack
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 9812561919
Keywords: Brain, Nutrition.
Abstract:

How did humans evolve larger and more sophisticated brains? Evolution, in general, depends on a special combination of circumstances: part genetics, part time, and part environment. In the case of human brain evolution, the main environmental influence was adaptation to a 'shore-based' diet, which provided the world's richest source of nutrition, as well as a sedentary lifestyle that promoted fat deposition. Such a diet included shellfish, fish, marsh plants, frogs, bird's eggs, etc. Humans, and more importantly, hominid babies started to get fat, a crucial distinction that led to the development of larger brains and to the evolution of modern humans. A larger brain is expensive to maintain and this increasing demand for energy results in, succintly, survival of the fattest.

Label: 2005