August 22, 2011

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Homo erectus was first master of the kitchen: study

Senior Palaeontologist at the National Museum of Kenya, Frederick Kyalo Manthi, carries the remains of a homo erectus discovered in 2000 near lake Turkana in Kenya in Nairobi in 2007. The first ancestor of modern humans to have mastered the art of cooking was likely homo erectus, which evolved around 1.9 million years ago, according to a US study.
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Senior Palaeontologist at the National Museum of Kenya, Frederick Kyalo Manthi, carries the remains of a homo erectus discovered in 2000 near lake Turkana in Kenya in Nairobi in 2007. The first ancestor of modern humans to have mastered the art of cooking was likely homo erectus, which evolved around 1.9 million years ago, according to a US study.

The first ancestor of modern humans to have mastered the art of cooking was likely homo erectus, which evolved around 1.9 million years ago, according to a US study published Monday.

The ability to cook and process food allowed homo erectus, the Neanderthals and homo sapiens to make huge evolutionary leaps that differentiated them from chimpanzees and other primates, said researchers at Harvard University.

Based on an analysis of DNA, molar size and body mass among non-human primates, modern humans, and 14 extinct , the findings in the support previous studies that suggested homo erectus may have known how to cook.

Preparing food with tools and fire meant more calories could be consumed and less time needed to be spent foraging and eating. Molar sizes shrunk while body mass increased.

Among primates, animals with larger body sizes grew bigger molars and spent more time eating -- great apes of similar size to humans spend about 48 percent of the day consuming calories.

"Homo erectus and spent 6.1% and 7%, respectively, of their active day feeding," said the Harvard study, adding that modern humans spend 4.7% of their days eating.

"Human feeding time and molar size are truly exceptional compared with other primates, and their oddity began around the start of the Pleistocene," said the study, referring to the epoch that began about 2.5 million years ago and ended 11,700 years ago.

Cooking may actually have originated with other species that also lived in Africa and came just before homo erectus, including and homo rudolfensis, the study said.

In any case, the tools and behaviors necessary to support a cooking culture "related to feeding and now necessary for long-term survival of modern humans evolved by the time of and before our lineage left Africa."

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