You are making the classic short-sighted mistake of all Price devotees in that you are suggesting that evidence from a closer era re modern tribes is as good as evidence from far away times such as in the Palaeo era. Clearly, evidence from palaeo times is inevitably going to be less substantial and clear-cut given the extra millennia involved, plus there were different practices in palaeo times(Ie no grain-eating such as happened with the Maoris). While evidence from closer periods can indeed be sketchy of itself, scientific analysis of aging in bones seems to be more rigorous than scientific measuring of diet via bone-analysis.
Incidentally, there is plenty of evidence re Maori low life expectancy(lower than in Palaeo times) plus lower fertility etc. I went over this before, providing links:-
"In my haste last time I forgot to check a couple of websites. Anyway,
it turns out that the severe collapse in the Maori population after
the colonists arrived, appears to have been not only due to being
shifted onto swamp-land etc.,like I stated earlier, but also to do
with the fact that there was a large reduction in the amount of
animal food available to them as a result of this transfer, so that
they depended mostly on the grains in the ancient Maori diet, such
as sweet potatoes(kumara),ferns etc., which caused a devastating
collapse in health. So we basically have 2 periods. One, centuries
before the colonists arrived, where Maoris suffered a significant
decrease in health after turning to a moderate extent to grain
products via agriculture, and then very nearly dying out after
switching to mainly grain products over a period of a few decades. So
it wasn't a transition to refined Western-type refined foods that
almost killed off the Maori population(despite what Price claimed), but the grain in the diet.
Geoff
--- In rawpaleodiet@yahoogroups.com, "Geoff" <geoffpurcell@...> wrote:
>
> Actually, there's plenty of evidence to show that the Maoris were
in
> a poor state of health in pre-colonial times. It seems that the
> Maoris followed a mainly meat/fat/fish diet, with very little
> veg/fruit, up to c.1500 AD, after which they turned to agriculture
to
> some extent, eating grain such as manioc, sweet potatoes, as well
as
> ferns etc., at which point their health suffered dramatically(note
> that they still had very high portions of seafood in their diet, at
> the time).
>
> Here's an excerpt from the Net re this:-
>
> "The harshness of the Maori diet meant low life expectancy, high
> infant mortality, and low fertility" (Olssen & Stenson, 1989: 4).
> from:-
>
>
http://www.rcnz.org.nz/resources/fnf/a99.htm>
>
> The following 2 websites go on about the gradual decrease in height
> of (pre-1769)Maori skeletons, over the centuries, as they turned to
> eating grains, including a few mentions of frequent stomach-tumours
> in the Maori population, and the excessive wearing of teeth,
> especially molars, due to consumption of plant foods. They do have
> one or two nice things to say about Maori health, but mostly they
> mention the low rate of life-expectancy(25-30 years), the low
> fertility, the high susceptibility to disease etc in pre-colonial
> times:-
>
>
http://tinyurl.com/gs5oy>
>
http://tinyurl.com/kk5vu>
>
> The major cause of Maori near-extinction appears to be the arrival
of
> the colonists carrying new diseases, to which they weren't resistant
> (due to bad grain-filled diet?), and the British tendency to put
> Maoris on swamp-land reservations, which encouraged the spread of
> disease even more. This is similiar to the New World, where Indian
> tribes similiarly contracted disease within a couple of decades of
> contact with white settlers, long before they actually turned to
> Western-style diets.(The Maoris actually only turned to Western-
style
> diets c.1900, according to the Net, some time after the threat of
> extinction had passed. I won't deny that their
grain/fish "primitive"
> diet was better than a refined-foods diet, but, given the evidence,
a
> Palaeo diet is undoubtedly better than a Weston-Price grain- (or
> dairy-)-filled diet).
>
> Geoff"