What Humans ACTUALLY Evolved to Eat! | Dr Miki Ben-Dor, Ep 76
Dr. Anthony Chaffee interviews Dr. Mickey Bendor, a paleontologist and economist who discovered the carnivore diet at age 58 after suffering from undiagnosed celiac disease for decades. Dr. Bendor brings a unique analytical perspective from his economics background to examine human dietary evolution, having completed his PhD at 68 to study what humans actually ate throughout prehistory. His recent paper "The Evolution of Human Trophic Levels During the Pleistocene" presents compelling evidence that humans were apex predators and hypercarnivores for at least 2 million years.
Using his economic training to analyze energetic returns, Dr. Bendor explains why humans couldn't have been flexible omnivores - plant foods provide only one-tenth the energetic return of animal foods, making plant-heavy diets economically impossible for early humans. He presents 15 pieces of physiological evidence showing our evolution toward carnivory, including stomach acidity levels that match scavengers, intestinal structure opposite to chimpanzees, and genetic adaptations for increased fat consumption. The discussion reveals how our brain size increased steadily for 2.5 million years while hunting large animals, then decreased sharply around 20,000 years ago coinciding with increased plant consumption.
Dr. Bendor challenges the common comparison to modern hunter-gatherers like the Hadza, explaining that the megafauna extinction fundamentally changed available food sources - early humans hunted 12-ton elephants and 500-kilogram average mammals, while today's average mammal weighs only 10 kilograms. Archaeological evidence shows perfect teeth in ancient humans versus crooked, diseased teeth appearing 15,000 years ago with increased plant consumption. The conversation covers optimal fat ratios, protein limits (around 4 grams per kilogram body weight), and why humans specifically targeted prime adult animals for their higher fat content.
Key Takeaways
- Humans were hypercarnivores consuming 70% or more calories from animal sources for at least 2 million years, supported by 15 pieces of physiological evidence including stomach acidity matching scavengers
- Plant foods provide only one-tenth the energetic return of animal foods, making flexible omnivory economically impossible for early humans who operated at the edge of energetic sustainability
- Human brain size increased steadily for 2.5 million years while hunting megafauna, then decreased sharply 20,000 years ago coinciding with increased plant consumption and the need for less complex hunting strategies
- Archaeological evidence shows perfect teeth in ancient humans versus the first appearance of dental pathology 15,000 years ago in Morocco sites with strong evidence of plant food consumption
- Early humans specialized in hunting prime adult animals (2-4 years old) despite them being faster and more difficult to catch, because they contained significantly more fat than young or old animals
- The average mammal size was 500 kilograms 2.5 million years ago (including 12-ton elephants) versus 10 kilograms today, making comparisons to modern hunter-gatherers like the Hadza misleading for understanding ancestral diets
- Protein intake should be limited to approximately 4 grams per kilogram of body weight daily, meaning most calories must come from fat (60-65%) rather than carbohydrates for optimal human nutrition
- Traditional plant preparation methods like fermenting tef grain for two weeks were necessary to reduce toxins, knowledge that modern society has lost while assuming plants are automatically safe to consume
- Dr. Mickey Bandor's Journey from Economics to Paleontology
- Economic Analysis of Human Evolution and Diet
- Evidence for Humans as Apex Predators and Hypercarnivores
- Problems with Modern Hunter-Gatherer Analogies Like the Hadza
- Anecdotal Evidence vs Randomized Control Trials in Nutrition
- Brain Size Growth and Decline Linked to Diet Changes
- Megafauna Extinction and the Rise of Agriculture
- Plant Toxins and Traditional Food Preparation Methods
- Dr. Bandor's Current Carnivore Diet and Food Choices
- Evidence for Human Fat Consumption and Hunting Practices
- Protein Requirements and Rabbit Starvation
- Mammal Size Decline and Human Impact Over Millions of Years
- Fire Usage for Protection vs Cooking and Future Research Projects
This is an auto-generated transcript from YouTube and may contain errors or inaccuracies.