One of the common arguments used against RPDs and Paleo diets in general is the the idea that few or no Stone Agers lived beyond the age of 35, 33, or even 30, and that their average lifespans increased when they adopted agriculture. This is an old canard, refuted by scientists and explorers long ago. An average lifespan of 33 years doesn't mean that nearly everyone died around that age, it means that many died in infancy and a significant proportion lived well beyond 33. According to multiple sources (see below for some), if you survived childbirth, infectious disease, accidents, wild animals and battles, you likely had a good chance of surviving well beyond 33, with some reaching their 80s and beyond.
The average lifespans of hunter-gatherers actually decreased, not increased, when they adopted Neolithic farming. Newer techniques of determining age from bones may further raise the average lifespan estimates for Stone Agers (Ward Nicholson, Longevity & health in ancient Paleolithic vs. Neolithic peoples: Not what you may have been told,
http://www.beyondveg.com/nicholson-w/angel-1984/angel-1984-1a.shtml).
The later increases in life expectancy during the industrial era were mainly due to public health achievements such as better sanitation, safer food, effective systems of quarantine, immunizations and improved childbirth survival rates. The crucial fact to focus on is that the bones of those Stone Agers who did survive into middle and old age are generally free of evidence of the chronic diseases of civilization.
The lifespan fallacy is commonly believed to have arisen from the loose interpretation of some remarks in Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan, in which Hobbes was actually inspired by the war-shortened lives of Englishman during the Civil War of the 17th century, not Stone Agers: “the life of man solitary, poore, nasty, brutish, and short" (Leviathan, 1651, ch. 13).
Stephan Guyenet, PhD researched the issue (Mortality and Lifespan of the Inuit, Saturday, July 5, 2008,
http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2008/07/mortality-and-lifespan-of-inuit.html) and found that if one excludes infant mortality the first-contact Inuit “probably had a similar life expectancy” to the Russians that first recorded their health statistics, which is amazing given that the Russians had already infected them with contagious diseases to which they were not resistant.
This one should erase nearly any doubts: Dr. Michael Eades reviewed the Cassidy Study of nutrition and health in agriculturalists vs. hunter-gatherers that shows that
the life expectancies and infant mortality of hunter-gatherers were superior to those of agriculturalists when major non-dietary variables were constant (Nutrition and health in agriculturalists and hunter-gatherers, by Michael Eades, MD, 22 April 2009, 2:21 Uhr,
http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/low-carb-diets/nutrition-and-health-in-agriculturalists-and-hunter-gatherers/#more-2877)
See also:
>
"Paleo Longevity Redux, Letter to the Editor", By Jeff D. Leach, Public Health Nutrition: 10(11), 1336–1337,
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?aid=1363376> Loren Cordain, PhD,
“FAQs,” http://thepaleodiet.com/faqs/I have more info, including more on the history of this fallacy, if anyone's interested.