In a remote area of Tanzania, Hadza men leave their huts on foot, armed with bows and poison-tipped arrows, to hunt for their next meal. Dinner could come in the form of a small bird, a towering giraffe, or something in between. Meanwhile, Hadza women gather tubers, berries, and other fruits.
This is everyday life for these indigenous people who live around Lake Eyasi in East Africa. They are one of the last hunter-gatherer populations on Earth.
The Hadza live a very different kind of lifestyle—and a very active one, engaging in significantly more physical activity than what is recommended by US government standards. They also have extremely low risk of cardiovascular disease.
Researchers say the Hadza lifestyle offers a glimpse into how our ancestors lived tens of thousands of years ago, and how that way of life may have impacted human evolution, especially with regard to exercise and health.
75 minutes every day
“Our overall research program is trying to understand why physical activity and exercise improve health today, and one arm of that research program aims to reconstruct what physical activity patterns were like during the evolution of our physiology,” says David Raichlen, associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona.
“The overarching hypothesis is that our bodies evolved within a highly active context, and that explains why physical activity seems to improve physiological health today.”
A new paper published in the American Journal of Human Biology details how much time the Hadza spend engaged in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, or MVPA, which is a strong predictor of cardiovascular health.
The US Department of Health and Human Services recommends that people engage in 150 minutes per week of moderate intensity activity—about 30 minutes a day, five times a week—or about 75 minutes per week of vigorous intensity activity, or an equivalent combination of the two. However, few Americans achieve those levels.
The Hadza, on the other hand, meet those weekly recommendations in just two days, engaging in about 75 minutes per day of MVPA.
Furthermore, and consistent with the literature identifying aerobic activity as a key element necessary to a healthy lifestyle, researchers’ health screenings of Hadza people shows they have are at extremely low risk for heart disease.
“They have very low levels of hypertension,” Raichlen says. “In the US, the majority of our population over the age of 60 has hypertension. In the Hadza, it’s 20 to 25 percent, and in terms of blood lipid levels, there’s virtually no evidence that the Hadza people have any kind of blood lipid levels that would put them at risk for cardiovascular disease.”
While physical activity may not be entirely responsible for the low risk levels—diet and other factors may also play a role—exercise does seem to be important, which is significant because humans’ physical activity levels have drastically declined as we have transitioned from hunting and gathering to farming to the Industrial Revolution to where we are today.
Active at all ages
“Over the last couple of centuries, we’ve become more and more sedentary, and the big shift seems to have occurred in the middle of the last century, when people’s work lives became more sedentary,” Raichlen says.
While other studies on hunter-gatherer populations have relied on observational data, the new study gathered quantitative data using chest-strap heart rate monitors and GPS trackers to record how far and how fast the Hadza people travel on a daily basis. Participants put on the monitors at the beginning of the day and handed them over each night to the researchers, who lived amid the Hadza during the study period.
“This is the first study that’s looked at their cardiovascular intensity throughout the day, so it helps us understand a little bit more about what cardiovascular intensity levels are like in this lifestyle,” Raichlen says.
Notably, Hadza adults’ activity levels don’t seem to fluctuate much over their lifespan.
“In the US, we tend to see big drop-offs in physical activity levels when people age,” Raichlen says. “In the Hadza, we don’t see that. We see pretty static physical activity levels with age.”
Of the fewer than 1,000 Hadza left, an estimated 300 to 400 of them are full-time hunter-gatherers. They live a nomadic lifestyle, moving around every month or two but staying in the Lake Eyasi region.
The population provides a unique opportunity to learn about a lifestyle that is more similar—although not identical—to that of our ancestors. Study participants take part in the research voluntarily and communicate with researchers mainly in Swahili.
“This gives us a window into what physical activity levels were we like for quite a while during our evolutionary history, and, not surprisingly, it’s more than we do now,” Raichlen says. “Perhaps surprisingly, it’s a whole lot more than we do now.
“Going forward, this helps us model the types of physical activity we want to be looking at when we explore our physiological evolution. When we ask what kinds of physical activity levels would have driven the evolution of our cardiovascular system and the evolution of our neurobiology and our musculoskeletal system, the answer is not likely 30 minutes a day of walking on a treadmill. It’s more like 75-plus minutes a day.”
Researchers from Yale University and Hunter College are coauthors of the study.
Source: University of Arizona
Related Books:
at InnerSelf Market and Amazon