. Some recent paleo diet variants emphasize the consumption of unprocessed animal products. The basis of the diet is a re-imagining of what Paleolithic people ate, and different proponents recommend different diet compositions. Eaton and Konner, for example, wrote a 1988 book
The Paleolithic Prescription with
Marjorie Shostak, and it described a diet that is 65% plant based. This is not typical of more recently devised paleo diets; Loren Cordain's – probably the most popular – instead emphasizes animal products and avoidance of
processed food. Diet advocates concede the modern Paleolithic diet cannot be a faithful recreation of what Paleolithic people ate, and instead aim to "translate" that into a modern context, avoiding such likely historical practices as
cannibalism. Foodstuffs that have been described as permissible include: • "vegetables, fruits, nuts,
roots, meat, and organ meats"; • "vegetables (including root vegetables), fruit (including fruit oils, e.g., olive oil, coconut oil, and
palm oil), nuts, fish, meat, and eggs, and it excluded dairy, grain-based foods, legumes, extra sugar, and nutritional products of industry (including refined fats and refined carbohydrates)"; and • "avoids processed foods, and emphasizes eating vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds, eggs, and lean meats". The diet forbids the consumption of all
dairy products. This is because milking did not exist until animals were domesticated after the Paleolithic era.
Ancestral diet Adopting the Paleolithic diet assumes that modern humans can reproduce the hunter-gatherer diet. Molecular biologist
Marion Nestle argues that "knowledge of the relative proportions of animal and plant foods in the diets of early humans is circumstantial, incomplete, and debatable and that there are insufficient data to identify the composition of a genetically determined optimal diet. The evidence related to Paleolithic diets is best interpreted as supporting the idea that diets based largely on plant foods promote health and longevity, at least under conditions of food abundance and physical activity." Ideas about
Paleolithic diet and nutrition are at best hypothetical. The data for Cordain's book came from six contemporary hunter-gatherer groups, mainly living in marginal habitats. One of the studies was on the
!Kung, whose diet was recorded for a single month, and one was on the
diet of the Inuit. Due to these limitations, the book has been criticized as painting an incomplete picture of the diets of Paleolithic humans. It has been noted that the rationale for the diet does not adequately account for the fact that, due to the pressures of
artificial selection, most modern domesticated plants and animals differ drastically from their Paleolithic ancestors; likewise, their nutritional profiles are very different from their ancient counterparts. For example, wild
almonds produce potentially fatal levels of
cyanide, but this trait has been bred out of domesticated varieties using artificial selection. Many vegetables, such as
broccoli, did not exist in the Paleolithic period; broccoli,
cabbage,
cauliflower, and
kale are modern
cultivars of the ancient species
Brassica oleracea. Trying to devise an ideal diet by studying contemporary hunter-gatherers is difficult because of the great disparities that exist; for example, the animal-derived calorie percentage ranges from 25% for the
Gwi people of southern Africa to 99% for the Alaskan
Nunamiut. Descendants of populations with different diets have different genetic adaptations to those diets, such as the ability to digest sugars from starchy foods. Modern hunter-gatherers tend to exercise considerably more than modern office workers, protecting them from heart disease and diabetes, though highly processed modern foods also contribute to diabetes when those populations move into cities. A 2018 review of the diet of hunter-gatherer populations found that the dietary provisions of the Paleolithic diet had been based on questionable research, and were "difficult to reconcile with more detailed ethnographic and nutritional studies of hunter-gatherer diet". Researchers have proposed that cooked starches met the energy demands of an increasing brain size, based on variations in the copy number of genes encoding
amylase. ==Health effects==