Hunter-prey correlation between migration routes of African buffaloes and early hominids: Evidence for the “Out of Africa” hypothesis

  • Ginneken V
  • van Meerveld A
  • Wijgerde T
  • et al.
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Abstract

Based on the similarity of migration routes of early bovines and early hominids (direct hunter-prey correlation) we postulate the hypothesis that early hunter hominids followed the herds of buffaloes and that the dispersal of early hominids pan-Africa is directly correlated to the historical migration of the African buffalo. This reasoning gives supportive evidence for the “Out of Africa” hypothesis. In addition, brain fattening (“brain steatosis”) has previously been demonstrated after exposure of a juvenile mouse strain to a bovine lard High-Fat diet and starvation -as an evolutionary paradox- in whole brain using LCMS-techniques [1]. Here we postulate the hypotheses that accumulation of specific Triacylglycerols from bovine lard (large amounts of unsaturated C:50-1; C:50-2; C:52-2; C:52-3; C:54-3;C:54-4 and C:56-3 TGs) in early hominid brain could have contributed to encephalization in human evolution. Following this lipidomics based scientific approach [2] we gave supportive evidence for the “Out of Africa” hypothesis.

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APA

Ginneken, V. van, van Meerveld, A., Wijgerde, T., Verheij, E., de Vries, E., & van der Greef, J. (2017). Hunter-prey correlation between migration routes of African buffaloes and early hominids: Evidence for the “Out of Africa” hypothesis. Integrative Molecular Medicine, 4(3). https://doi.org/10.15761/imm.1000287

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