4.2 • 639 Ratings
🗓️ 17 March 2015
⏱️ 2 minutes
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0:00.0 | Understanding the human body is a team effort. That's where the Yachtel group comes in. |
0:05.8 | Researchers at Yachtolt have been delving into the secrets of probiotics for 90 years. Yacold also |
0:11.5 | partners with nature portfolio to advance gut microbiome science through the global grants for |
0:16.6 | gut health, an investigator-led research program. To learn more about Yachtold, visit yawcult.co. |
0:22.6 | com.j. That's Y-A-K-U-L-T.C-O.J-P. When it comes to a guide for your gut, count on Yacolt. |
0:34.0 | This is Scientific American 60-second science. I'm Cynthia Graber. Got a minute? |
0:39.1 | People have been living near rainforests for tens of thousands of years, |
0:42.8 | but most available evidence has intense use of forest resources starting just 10,000 years ago. |
0:48.0 | So scientists thought that the dense tropical forests were so hard to navigate and find food in |
0:52.8 | that humans would have mainly depended on open |
0:55.1 | planes nearby. But some researchers had doubts. Modern forest foragers do just fine in the rainforest, |
1:01.4 | and some evidence in Africa pointed to humans in rainforests well before the 10,000 year mark. |
1:06.9 | Now there's hard evidence out of Sri Lanka that people roamed and dined on rainforest offerings |
1:11.6 | at least 10,000 years earlier than we thought. The finding is in the journal science. |
1:15.6 | Researchers measured carbon and oxygen isotopes in the remains of 26 humans found in the Sri Lankan rainforest. |
1:21.6 | The bodies were some 20,000 years old. |
1:24.6 | Isotope signatures differ for plants that live beneath the closed rainforest |
1:28.0 | canopy than for plants from the open plains. Any animals that eat those plants then also carry |
1:33.1 | those forest isotopes, as did the remains, showing that these humans subsisted on tropical |
1:37.6 | forest vegetation. The findings show that humans have been taking advantage of rainforests for |
1:42.0 | at least 20 millennia. Whether our accelerated resource extraction will allow any substantial rainforests to exist |
1:47.9 | even 1,000 years from now is a very open question. |
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