Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns

En las sociedades tradicionales, los hombres son más propensos aconsumir grandes cantidades de alimentos en unas pocas comidasdiarias, mientras que las mujeres tienden a consumir pequeñascantidades de comida, pero con más frecuencia durante el día. Aquípropongo la hipótesis de que este comportamiento tiene una basebiológica, porque en las sociedades de cazadores-recolectores, loshombres hacían la caza en grandes áreas y comían abundantementeal obtener una presa, mientras que las mujeres se movían en unazona más restringida, recolectaban y con frecuencia comían de lospequeños alimentos hallados. Sugiero que en el sentido gastronómico,la orientación del hombre es extra-territorial y la orientación de la mujeres predominantemente intra-territorial.ABSTRACT In traditional societies, men are more likely to consume substantialamounts of food in a few daily meals, whereas women tend to consumesmaller quantities of food but to do it more frequently during the day.Here I propose the hypothesis that this behavior has a biological basisbecause in hunting-gathering societies, it was the men who did thehunting over large areas and had to wait until a kill was made to eat(often a large amount of food in a single sitting), while women movedin a more restricted area, did the gathering and frequently ate some ofthe small pieces of food that they found. I suggest that in gastronomicand spatial terms, the orientation of the male is extra-territorial and theorientation of the female is predominantly intra-territorial.

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Main Author: Pont, Graham
Format: Digital revista
Language:spa
Published: Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica 2012
Online Access:https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/1
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spelling oai:revistas.investiga.uned.ac.cr:article12022-09-02T02:22:25Z Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns Pont, Graham En las sociedades tradicionales, los hombres son más propensos aconsumir grandes cantidades de alimentos en unas pocas comidasdiarias, mientras que las mujeres tienden a consumir pequeñascantidades de comida, pero con más frecuencia durante el día. Aquípropongo la hipótesis de que este comportamiento tiene una basebiológica, porque en las sociedades de cazadores-recolectores, loshombres hacían la caza en grandes áreas y comían abundantementeal obtener una presa, mientras que las mujeres se movían en unazona más restringida, recolectaban y con frecuencia comían de lospequeños alimentos hallados. Sugiero que en el sentido gastronómico,la orientación del hombre es extra-territorial y la orientación de la mujeres predominantemente intra-territorial.ABSTRACT In traditional societies, men are more likely to consume substantialamounts of food in a few daily meals, whereas women tend to consumesmaller quantities of food but to do it more frequently during the day.Here I propose the hypothesis that this behavior has a biological basisbecause in hunting-gathering societies, it was the men who did thehunting over large areas and had to wait until a kill was made to eat(often a large amount of food in a single sitting), while women movedin a more restricted area, did the gathering and frequently ate some ofthe small pieces of food that they found. I suggest that in gastronomicand spatial terms, the orientation of the male is extra-territorial and theorientation of the female is predominantly intra-territorial. Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica 2012-12-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/1 10.22458/urj.v4i2.1 UNED Research Journal; Vol. 4 No. 2 (2012); 143-146 UNED Research Journal; Vol. 4 Núm. 2 (2012); 143-146 1659-441X 1659-4266 spa https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/1/1
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country Costa Rica
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language spa
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author Pont, Graham
spellingShingle Pont, Graham
Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns
author_facet Pont, Graham
author_sort Pont, Graham
title Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns
title_short Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns
title_full Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns
title_fullStr Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns
title_full_unstemmed Sexual differences in the consumption of food by Homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns
title_sort sexual differences in the consumption of food by homo sapiens: some speculations in archeogastronomy and the evolution of eating patterns
description En las sociedades tradicionales, los hombres son más propensos aconsumir grandes cantidades de alimentos en unas pocas comidasdiarias, mientras que las mujeres tienden a consumir pequeñascantidades de comida, pero con más frecuencia durante el día. Aquípropongo la hipótesis de que este comportamiento tiene una basebiológica, porque en las sociedades de cazadores-recolectores, loshombres hacían la caza en grandes áreas y comían abundantementeal obtener una presa, mientras que las mujeres se movían en unazona más restringida, recolectaban y con frecuencia comían de lospequeños alimentos hallados. Sugiero que en el sentido gastronómico,la orientación del hombre es extra-territorial y la orientación de la mujeres predominantemente intra-territorial.ABSTRACT In traditional societies, men are more likely to consume substantialamounts of food in a few daily meals, whereas women tend to consumesmaller quantities of food but to do it more frequently during the day.Here I propose the hypothesis that this behavior has a biological basisbecause in hunting-gathering societies, it was the men who did thehunting over large areas and had to wait until a kill was made to eat(often a large amount of food in a single sitting), while women movedin a more restricted area, did the gathering and frequently ate some ofthe small pieces of food that they found. I suggest that in gastronomicand spatial terms, the orientation of the male is extra-territorial and theorientation of the female is predominantly intra-territorial.
publisher Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica
publishDate 2012
url https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/1
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