As a whole, humans have experienced chronic food shortage and malnutrition since the dawn of time.1 Delve back to the Paleolithic period and there’s no skeletal evidence of overweight humans. Hunter-gatherers were most likely thin, like the current last remaining hunter-gatherers – the few indigenous peoples across the globe still living as their tribal ancestors have. Take the Kalahari Bushmen in Africa, for example, these persistence hunters may chase prey 2-5 hours until the target animal is exhausted enough for the hunter to spear it by hand! Needless to say, they were likely not overweight.
Enter the Neolithic era approximately 10,000 years ago in the aftermath of the last the ice age; its advent of agriculture and animal domestication systems are but two examples of human adaptations over thousands of years to which we can attribute our survival. The convenience of centralizing food procurement in such a way was a logical answer to the growth of human population whilst wild game dwindled and foraging grew impractical.2 The concentrated production of crops and edible animals saved us from the very real threat of starvation that existed. Historically, farming and agriculture were physically demanding ventures with energy costs comparable to, and in some cases exceeding, that of foraging.2 Thus, normal weight or underweight was the norm and obesity was rare.