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Research reveals farming made our ancestors shorter

The finding is based on limb bones from 167 prehistoric adults who lived either before or after humans began growing their own crops.

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Agricultural land and red american farm, Hancock Shaker Village, Massachusetts, USA
(Photo by Structured Vision via Shutterstock)

By Mark Waghorn via SWNS

Farming made our ancestors shorter, according to new research.

The switch from hunter-gatherer lifestyles to crops lopped an average 1.5 inches off their height.

Agriculture gets more food for less work but initially ditching foraging might have been bad for Neolithic man's health.

The finding is based on limb bones from 167 prehistoric adults who lived either before or after humans began growing their own crops.

Lead author Dr. Stephanie Marciniak, of Penn State University, said: "Recent studies tried to characterize the contribution of DNA to height.

"We started thinking about the longstanding questions around the shift from hunting, gathering and foraging to sedentary farming and decided to look at the health effect with height as a proxy."

The US team's model also combined signs of stress in the skeletal remains and gene mapping.

Dr. Marciniak said: "Our approach is unique in that we used height measurements and ancient DNA taken from the same individuals."

They lived between 38,000 and 2,400 years ago - a time span that includes pre-agriculture and the earliest and subsequent farmers.

A computer model showed those from the Neolithic were 1.5 inches shorter than their predecessors.

Also known as the New Stone Age, the Neolithic marks the birth of agriculture.

What is more, these people were also almost an inch shorter than subsequent individuals.

Heights steadily increased through the Copper (0.77in), the Bronze (1.06in) and the Iron (1.29in) ages - with respect to the Neolithic.

Settled farming communities occurred across Europe at different times.

For instance, they emerged in the Levant and Britain around 10,200 and 6,000 years ago, respectively.

Dr. Marciniak said: "Right now, what we know is 80% of height is from genetic makeup and 20% is from the environment. Researchers haven't yet identified all the genetic variants associated with for height."

The study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences also investigated genetic ancestry.

She explained: "There was movement of people, generally from east to west. We wanted to account for that migration that perhaps brought different proportions of height-associated genetic variants."

It is difficult to envision a world without farms. But as recently as 10 millennia ago, only in the Middle East had people turned from hunting and gathering.

The effect has fascinated public health experts for decades.

Diets became monotonous, and a narrower range of food courted disaster from failed harvests.

More people packed together for longer periods increased the risk of disease from contaminated water, food and soil.

Social mechanisms developed to adjudicate disputes, dampening tensions that could tear communities apart.

People had to defend themselves, their land and stored food from neighboring groups because it was no longer easy to move away from sources of conflict.

Added Dr. Marciniak: "This research requires more study with larger datasets. Our work represents a snapshot of something that is very dynamic and very nuanced.

"We need to do more to see what is the cause of the decrease in achieved height versus predicted genetic height during the shift to farming."

The researchers said they believe that their approach is adaptable to studies of past human health - and could be applied in other contexts.

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