I have little idea as to intact original dieters there might be on the planet.
They are few and far between, and the Hadza are one of the better groups to study, and they live in an area that humans have lived in for millions of years, so it's not at all surprising that scientists have studied them.
And that they all shared one thing in common, a good source of some animal protein. I'm sure you're aware of this.
Yes, of course, you're preaching to the choir on that. And the Hadza also eat some animal protein (as do all primates, as I discussed extensively in the past), and that wasn't the only thing that all the groups shared.
I restate this simply to balance the table of what constitutes a healthy diet.
Yes, as I already explained, I wasn't talking about extreme fruit-only diets and I still think that some Instinctos lean too heavily on fruits and don't have sufficiently diverse diets for their needs, I just don't discount the views of GCB and other Instinctos on tropical fruits and excess meat intake as much as I used to.
If your researchers quoted could in theory go to those earlier groups, they would probably find additional balances of healthy bacteria. And my guess is that some form of RS existed in all their diets. To what extent RS played a role in 'others' diets, I don't know. I haven't thought much about it.
It's too bad that they can't go to those earlier groups. So to some degree we are indeed left to guess about that. We can get some idea from dig-site evidence.
My point on the Tuber creating a bigger brain, I think you missed, was they've been around probably since people existed, and hence have probably been eaten for the same amount of time. Thus why should those tubers all of a sudden create a bigger brain? Especially with the introduction at some point of fire, hence cooking the tubers would result in lower levels of RS.
The reason why some like the tuber hypothesis is that our primate ancestors started eating tubers in quantity when they shifted from the trees to savannah, whereupon their brains grew, and as they consumed more tubers, their brains grew further. RS wasn't considered early on, because the scientists weren't aware of it. It turns out that if you cook AND COOL tubers overnight, you still end up with plenty of RS. If cooking causes you to eat more tubers, then you might even get more RS. Thus, it might not be cooking that's the factor, so much as RS, but it's a speculative hypothesis at this point.
So RS (and perhaps other prebiotics) is a possible factor. I'm not saying that it definitely is, I'm just sharing the various hypotheses.
Many of the same things can be said for meat/fat, which I've discussed extensively in the past, so I won't rehash that here.
I am still not convinced that food for the intestine has to be in the form of this seemingly narrowly defined description of RS.
It doesn't have to be just RS, and in nature it's never just RS that feeds gut bacteria. I don't know anyone who claims that commensal bacteria will only eat RS. That was never the point.
And maybe this is simply semantics, but I've written before that any undigested fibrous material making it to the large intestines feeds bacteria there.
And I explained before that it's not all about RS. Leach's findings are actually more about biodiversity of diet and microbiota. He has found that a diverse diet feeds a diverse microbiome, which is associated with health benefits.
Which means that everyone is feeding their guts all the time.
Not everyone is feeding their guts equally well.
You've pointed out the various gut feeding foods found in fresh animal parts. I've mentioned the effects of seaweed ( which has probably been one of the most used for of RS for all the peoples living around oceans ) . What I'm waiting to see from 'Jeff' and others, should they find other societies that eat a completely unadulterated balanced diet from local sources complete with animal proteins, and no additional flour, sugar or cooking oils,,,, how their bacteria counts will compare, especially if they hadn't been treated with antibiotics through their lives.
Yeah, and like I said, I suggested the Chukchi to him.
Bottom line as to what I'm trying to say is, My guess is that all natural diets contain enough beneficial food for healthy colon health. And it's all the other stuff we consume that messes with it.
It's a testable hypothesis. Would people who call themselves "Paleo dieters" (mostly the cooked type, as with most of the groups Price studied) fit what you mean?
No they do not talk about the amounts the HGs ate of tubers. In that reports I cited, they do indeed state , unequivocally, that tubers were the Hadza´s "LEAST PREFERRED FOODS" and that tubers were "FALLBACK FOODS", in other words, foods the fell back on when nothing else was available. That is , to put it mildly, somewhat indicative that I was correct!
Tyler, I already explained multiple times that the foods in the study were all STAPLE food types. They were all chosen for that reason, to give a representative sample of the Hadza diet, and that "LEAST PREFERRED" and "FALLBACK FOODS" DOES NOT NECESSARILY MEAN "MINIMALLY-CONSUMED." Like I said, if you don't believe me, you could go to the horse's mouth of one of the Hadza researchers, like Jeff Leach, like I did, but I doubt you will, because you've made clear that you're more interested in being correct than in learning the truth.
Whatever the case, diets high in plant food, containing tubers or otherwise, are not as healthy as ones with high proportions of raw meat in them.
That predetermined view explains many of your comments.
Unfortunately, Stone Age glacier hunters aren't alive today, so we can't directly study them or their microbiota.