
Siim Land Podcast #499 Humans Aren’t Supposed to Live This Long (Grandmothers Might Explain Why) - Dr Kristen Hawkes
Professor Kristen Hawkes is a pioneering anthropologist whose work helped bring the grandmother hypothesis to the spotlight of human evolution research. Through fieldwork and evolutionary theory, she argued that older women may have played a crucial role in shaping the human life course, not just by living longer, but by helping feed and support grandchildren. That idea helped reframe menopause, longevity, and family cooperation as possible drivers of what makes humans distinct and what explains our longer lifespans.
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Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
01:05 How Kristen started to think about the paradox of grandmother longevity
09:15 What accounts for variation in adult mortality across lifespan
13:40 Difference in male and female longevity
17:20 Why human babies are very dependent
20:05 Bon Charge sponsorship
21:10 Dynamics of human social evolution and longevity
23:05 How longer weening period in human babies contributes to our intelligence
29:35 Weening and intelligence
34:25 Evolutionary explanation for grandparents
36:35 The contribtion of hunting success vs gathering to children size in Hadza
47:05 Does the grandmother hypothesis make sense
48:15 Role of DHA and seafood in human brain evolution
51:35 Social hierarchy of grandparents in the Hadza
56:01 Grandfathers
01:08:35 Role of grandparents in the modern world
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