Found 7 Hypotheses across 1 Pages (0.001 seconds)
  1. There is no difference in food availability between foragers and agriculturalists (121).Benyshek, Daniel C. - Exploring the thrifty genotype's food-shortage assumptions: a cross-cultural..., 2006 - 2 Variables

    This article tests the assumption that foragers are more likely to experience regular and severe food shortages than sedentary agriculturalists. The results indicate that there is no statistical difference in the quantity of available food or the frequency or extent of food shortages between preindustrial foragers, recent foragers, and agriculturalists.

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  2. There is no difference in food shortage frequency between foragers and agriculturalists (121).Benyshek, Daniel C. - Exploring the thrifty genotype's food-shortage assumptions: a cross-cultural..., 2006 - 2 Variables

    This article tests the assumption that foragers are more likely to experience regular and severe food shortages than sedentary agriculturalists. The results indicate that there is no statistical difference in the quantity of available food or the frequency or extent of food shortages between preindustrial foragers, recent foragers, and agriculturalists.

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  3. There is no difference in food shortage extent between foragers and agriculturalists (121).Benyshek, Daniel C. - Exploring the thrifty genotype's food-shortage assumptions: a cross-cultural..., 2006 - 2 Variables

    This article tests the assumption that foragers are more likely to experience regular and severe food shortages than sedentary agriculturalists. The results indicate that there is no statistical difference in the quantity of available food or the frequency or extent of food shortages between preindustrial foragers, recent foragers, and agriculturalists.

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  4. There are ethnographic accounts of human societies that are/were known to regularly practice maternal placentophagy.Young, Sharon M. - In Search of Human Placentophagy: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Human Placenta ..., 2010 - 1 Variables

    The present research examines the consumption, treatment, and disposal of the human placenta in a sample of 179 societies. The findings reveal differences between placental mammals and humans as maternal placentophagy, the consumption of the placenta, is rare. Treatment and disposal of the placenta is variable but ubiquitous cross-culturally.

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  5. There are ethnographic accounts of human societies that are/were known to regularly practice placentophagy by someone other than the mother.Young, Sharon M. - In Search of Human Placentophagy: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Human Placenta ..., 2010 - 1 Variables

    The present research examines the consumption, treatment, and disposal of the human placenta in a sample of 179 societies. The findings reveal differences between placental mammals and humans as maternal placentophagy, the consumption of the placenta, is rare. Treatment and disposal of the placenta is variable but ubiquitous cross-culturally.

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  6. There are ethnographic accounts of human societies that specify the special handling/treatment/disposition of the placenta following parturition other than placentophagy.Young, Sharon M. - In Search of Human Placentophagy: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Human Placenta ..., 2010 - 1 Variables

    The present research examines the consumption, treatment, and disposal of the human placenta in a sample of 179 societies. The findings reveal differences between placental mammals and humans as maternal placentophagy, the consumption of the placenta, is rare. Treatment and disposal of the placenta is variable but ubiquitous cross-culturally.

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  7. There are ethnographic accounts of human societies specifying particular cultural beliefs about how placenta handling can influence a person's life.Young, Sharon M. - In Search of Human Placentophagy: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Human Placenta ..., 2010 - 1 Variables

    The present research examines the consumption, treatment, and disposal of the human placenta in a sample of 179 societies. The findings reveal differences between placental mammals and humans as maternal placentophagy, the consumption of the placenta, is rare. Treatment and disposal of the placenta is variable but ubiquitous cross-culturally.

    Related HypothesesCite