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吃肉,可能是人類長壽的關鍵(ZT)

作者:野木耳  於 2009-12-18 01:49 發表於 最熱鬧的華人社交網路--貝殼村

作者分類:ZT|通用分類:其它日誌|已有33評論

 
 
    吃肉,可能是人類長壽的關鍵。科學家發現,人類吃肉較多的習慣,明顯導致人類的基因出現變化,較其他靈長類動物更長壽。這些基因改變,可能改善大腦發展,也使我們較不容易受老化的疾病例如癌症、心臟病和痴呆症的侵襲。
 
  黑猩猩和類人猿在基因上與人類相似,然而牠們的壽命極少多於50歲。雖然在過去200年間,由於飲食、環境和醫藥的改進,人類平均預期壽命增加了一倍,但即使不把這些因素計算在內,那些生活在打獵、搶劫、死亡率極高的環境下的人,出生后的預期壽命也比黑猩猩高一倍。
 
  洛杉磯南加州大學生物學家卡勒布.芬奇說,這些壽命的重要差別,可能是因為人類基因進化,適應了富含肉類的飲食。
 
  隨著我們的祖先進化,人類變得更能捕殺和消化肉類,而肉類是一種有價值、高能量的食物,人類的大腦和身體的體積增加了,同時內臟卻收縮了。
 
  隨著時間推移,人類吃了感染了寄生蟲的生肉,引起了慢性炎症。於是,人類便進化出一種運輸膽固醇的基因(載脂蛋白E)變體,來控制慢性炎症和控制大腦和動脈中的很多老化因素。
 
  一種在所有現代人身上發現的變體,叫做載脂蛋白E3,産生於約25萬年前,剛好是在非洲智人進化的最後階段之前。
 
  載脂蛋白E3降低大部分老化疾病的風險,尤其是心臟病和老人痴呆症,且與增加壽命有密切聯繫。

 
 
 
Ten fossils that evolved the tale of our origins Scientists piece together humanity's history from a growing fossil record
 
Introduction
Frank Franklin II / AP file

Introduction


By John Roach, contributor

Where did we come from? Many truth seekers turn to faith and religion and therein find their answers. Others approach the question through a scientific lens and the theory of evolution. They have pieced together a tale of human origins from the fossils of our ancestors. The tale is incomplete and its telling reshaped with fresh interpretation of the growing fossil record.

Click on the "Next" arrow above to learn about ten fossil discoveries that have evolved the scientific rendering of human origins. In this image, a reconstructed Neanderthal skeleton (above) is compared to a modern human.

 
Toumai: Earliest-known ancestor of modern humans?
MPFT

Toumai: Earliest-known ancestor of modern humans?


Jaw fragments, isolated teeth and a skull excavated from the Sahel desert of Chad dated to between 6 and 7 million years old may re-cast the opening chapter in the story of human origins. The fossils, revealed in 2001 and shown in this reconstruction, put the split in the evolutionary tree that eventually led to chimps on one branch and humans on the other more than 1,500 miles northwest of east Africa's Rift Valley, the current epicenter of research into human ancestors. But some scientists are not yet convinced the creature, named Sahelanthropus tchadensis and nicknamed Toumai, walked upright, which many scientists consider a key characteristic that distinguishes hominids from non-human primates.

Thigh bone suggests earliest two-legged walker
Courtesy John Gurche, Brian Richmond via Science

Thigh bone suggests earliest two-legged walker


Analysis of a thigh bone amongst a clutch of fossils discovered in Kenya in 2000 and dated to nearly 6 million years ago may provide the earliest definitive evidence of a human ancestor that walked on two legs. Several detailed analyses of the femur, or thigh bone, shown here, have revealed it was adapted for upright walking. The bone belongs to a species known as Orrorin tugenensis. Most recently, U.S. scientists concluded the strategy first exhibited by this species for walking upright persisted for 4 million years, the majority of evolutionary history.

Middle Awash discovery fills gap in evolution story
Tim D. White / Brill Atlanta
Middle Awash discovery fills gap in evolution story
Tim D. White / Brill Atlanta

Middle Awash discovery fills gap in evolution story


Teeth and bones of the hand, foot, and thigh, shown here, are among the fossils of a 4.2 million year old Australopithecus anamensis specimen found in Ethiopia's Middle Awash region that has allowed scientists to link together their most complete chain of human evolution to date. The discovery helped fill a gap in the story, showing a likely transition between an earlier human ancestor known as Ardipithecus ramidus to the more recent australopithecines. The Middle Awash has yielded eight species in the story spanning 6 million years.

Lucy, the world's most famous fossil
Dave Einsel / Getty Images

Lucy, the world's most famous fossil


Lucy, a 3.2 million-year-old Australopithecus afarensis named after the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," is perhaps the world's most famous fossil. She was discovered in the Afar region of Ethiopia in 1974 and remains among the most complete skeletons of an erect-walking human ancestor ever found, with about 40 percent of her bones intact. Her discovery allowed scientists for the first time to determine that upright walking predated the big brains of modern humans. Lucy's brain case is about the size of a chimp. In this file photo, visitors view the Lucy skeleton at a Houston museum. The exhibit is currently in Seattle.

Taung child hailed as 'missing link' in 1924
Denis Farrell / AP

Taung child hailed as 'missing link' in 1924


The diminutive fossil skull of 3.5-year-old early human ancestor, known as Taung child, was hailed as the "missing link" between apes and humans when it was discovered in 1924. Known scientifically as Australopithecus africanus, the discovery of the 2 million-year-old child also provided the first evidence that early humans evolved in Africa, rather than Europe, as many scientists believed at the time. In this photo, a researcher holds a replica of the skull as he makes the case that an eagle killed the Taung child.

Turkana boy, most complete skeleton found
Sayyid Azim / AP

Turkana boy, most complete skeleton found


Turkana boy, a nearly complete 1.6 million-year-old fossil of what some scientists call Homo ergaster, an early African population of Homo erectus, is considered the most complete skeleton of a prehistoric human ever found. The boy, who was discovered in 1984 in Kenya's Turkana region, stood 5-foot 3-inches, indicating that hominids had gotten considerably taller and lankier since the days of Lucy, 3.2 million years ago. Plans to unveil Turkana boy at the National Museum of Kenya, shown here, in 2007 caused a stir between creationists and scientists.

Image: Casa Rinconada
National Museums Of Kenya / F. Spoor / National Museum of Kenya via AP

Fossil discovery splinters human family tree


Many cartoons of evolution show a humpbacked ape slowly, linearly, progressing to a tall and erect modern human. Scientists long ago concluded that was too simple of a view, preferring instead to use a branching, thorny and knotted tree to depict the process. A discovery announced in 2007 threw yet another splinter in the picture. Many scientists had believed Homo habilis gave rise to Homo erectus who gave rise to modern humans. But the new finding shows habilis and erectus lived side by side for half a million years, raising doubt that habilis is a direct human ancestor. The scientists also found that erectus exhibited large size variation within the species, as shown in this image comparing two erectus skulls.

Image: Chankillo
Image courtesy of National Academy of Sciences, PNAS

Neanderthals' relationship to modern humans fuzzy


The 1856 discovery of a skull cap and partial skeleton from a cave in Germany's Neander valley was the first recognized fossil human form. But exactly how the species, named in 1864 as Homo neanderthalensis, is related to modern humans remains the subject of fierce academic debate. Neanderthals occupied Europe and Asia from about 200,000 years to 30,000 years ago, overlapping in places with modern humans. Recent genetic analyses suggest little, if any, interbreeding between the species. Skeletal evidence, however, suggests Neanderthals were not very different than their modern human cousins. Even their brains were comparable to, if not bigger, than ours, as depicted in this Neanderthal reconstruction. Other studies have shown that like modern humans, Neanderthals used tools, wore jewelry, hunted, and buried their dead.

Hobbit discovery stuns the world, stirs debate
Richard Lewis / AP

Hobbit discovery stuns the world, stirs debate


As modern humans spread around the world over the past 160,000 years or so, a hobbit-like ancestor was holed up on the Indonesian island of Flores until at least 12,000 years ago, scientists announced at a press briefing in 2004, shown here. The stunning find has been scrutinized ever since. Some scientists agree the fossils represent a new species, Homo floresiensis. Others suggest the fossils belong to a diminutive race of modern humans, perhaps afflicted by one of several diseases associated with dwarfing.

Oldest modern humans found in Ethiopia
Courtesy of Michael Day / AP

Oldest modern humans found in Ethiopia


The two partial skulls shown here of modern humans, Homo sapiens, were unearthed in Ethiopia in 1967. At the time, they were given a preliminary date of 130,000 years old. A 2005 revision using more modern dating techniques found them to be about 195,000 years old, making them the oldest known fossils of modern humans. Genetic evidence suggests modern humans arose in Africa about 200,000 years ago and then spread around the world, though other scientists hypothesize modern humans arose in parallel in Africa, Europe, and Asia.

 


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發表評論 評論 (33 個評論)

回復 練精化氣AAA 2009-12-18 02:13
不用腦子, 就能推出這個研究結果很滑稽。哈哈
回復 newsound 2009-12-18 02:48
素食主義者要問候你了
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 03:03
練精化氣AAA: 不用腦子, 就能推出這個研究結果很滑稽。哈哈
很多聰明人不一定相信啊~
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 03:04
newsound: 素食主義者要問候你了
就是要提醒他(她)們一下
回復 練精化氣AAA 2009-12-18 03:04
野木耳: 很多聰明人不一定相信啊~
唉,你想想就知道

早期人類, 吃的最多的肉是什麼
回復 mike05 2009-12-18 03:14
科學家們專門沒事找事:-)咋不和老虎獅子們比一比呀:-)它們也天天吃肉,未必就那麼長壽,那麼聰明吧。再說了,那些猴子在野外生活,居無定所,無遮無蔽,吃的也不乾不淨,怎麼跟文明環境下的人相比呢?既是是同類環境下生活的人,其生活習慣,飲食起居都有眾多不同,再加上這壽命也是個多因素的指標,這界定比較起來恐怕沒有他們說的那麼簡單吧。:-)
回復 綠水潭 2009-12-18 04:33
都把膽固醇吃高了,還能長壽...
回復 rebel 2009-12-18 05:20
吃肉的高興了,包括鄙人
回復 yuxin_9605 2009-12-18 05:32
還是要多吃肉?
回復 ManCreatedGod 2009-12-18 05:44
吃人更長壽
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 06:33
練精化氣AAA: 唉,你想想就知道

早期人類, 吃的最多的肉是什麼
是什麼
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 06:37
mike05: 科學家們專門沒事找事:-)咋不和老虎獅子們比一比呀:-)它們也天天吃肉,未必就那麼長壽,那麼聰明吧。再說了,那些猴子在野外生活,居無定所,無遮無蔽,吃
進化確實不是那麼簡單....科學家試圖從基因進化找證據.可以疑問的地方很多.
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 06:40
綠水潭: 都把膽固醇吃高了,還能長壽...
說是進化出運輸膽固醇的基因,提高消炎能力,延緩衰老,我想並不是鼓勵大家猛吃肉
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 06:42
rebel: 吃肉的高興了,包括鄙人
是啊,大家一樣,可能更心安理得了, 不過還是小心適量為上.
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 06:45
yuxin_9605: 還是要多吃肉?
這文說吃肉在人的進化中對長壽有作用,所以吃肉沒錯,多吃少吃,看健康情況,看自己的喜好, 我以前很愛吃,現在就吃得少(可能開始老了:)), 覺得挺好.
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 06:46
ManCreatedGod: 吃人更長壽
你有研究
回復 ManCreatedGod 2009-12-18 06:48
見你的貼!
回復 野木耳 2009-12-18 06:50
ManCreatedGod: 見你的貼!
都是肉
回復 yuxin_9605 2009-12-18 07:21
野木耳: 這文說吃肉在人的進化中對長壽有作用,所以吃肉沒錯,多吃少吃,看健康情況,看自己的喜好, 我以前很愛吃,現在就吃得少(可能開始老了:)), 覺得挺好.
哦,謝謝!~
回復 人間的盒子 2009-12-18 09:45
同意同意,肯定是關鍵。
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