There are still populations of lactose intolerant people. East Asians being the largest group, but there are populations in Europe. It’s a cultural thing. If your culture involved eating dairy with lactose then the populations adapted. A group in Europe created a yoghurt like dish that had no lactose as their traditional dairy dish and had no need to develop a tolerance.
So it mostly lines up with climate like you mentioned but there are exceptions when groups found loopholes.
It’s a cultural thing. If your culture involved eating dairy with lactose then the populations adapted.
But there’s a reason their diet includes it…
Likely that in Europe there was a benefit to children who could consume milk longer. Because in lean winter protein was scarce, but a mother with fat reserves could keep producing nutritional milk. Those calories at a young age translate to a larger (and according to a lot of studies) more intelligent adults.
That’s an advantage. Because they could consume leftover milk the mother was producing for a younger sibling. And humans just kept making babies for most of human evolution. And if the younger sibling died (very common back then) that was a lot of calories the family was wasting.
Eventually that likely led to desperate people trying milk from already domesticated livestock when the mother died (also very common).
Like…
If your culture involved eating dairy with lactose then the populations adapted
Obviously that wouldn’t be true. People had to be lactose tolerant before the food became a cultural norm. It would never catch on if it gave you diarrhea, not just because it was unpleasant, but that there’s still nutritional value from other foods there.
This isn’t a chicken and egg blurry line, one clearly had to have been before the other, and you’ve got it backwards.
There are still populations of lactose intolerant people. East Asians being the largest group, but there are populations in Europe. It’s a cultural thing. If your culture involved eating dairy with lactose then the populations adapted. A group in Europe created a yoghurt like dish that had no lactose as their traditional dairy dish and had no need to develop a tolerance.
So it mostly lines up with climate like you mentioned but there are exceptions when groups found loopholes.
But there’s a reason their diet includes it…
Likely that in Europe there was a benefit to children who could consume milk longer. Because in lean winter protein was scarce, but a mother with fat reserves could keep producing nutritional milk. Those calories at a young age translate to a larger (and according to a lot of studies) more intelligent adults.
That’s an advantage. Because they could consume leftover milk the mother was producing for a younger sibling. And humans just kept making babies for most of human evolution. And if the younger sibling died (very common back then) that was a lot of calories the family was wasting.
Eventually that likely led to desperate people trying milk from already domesticated livestock when the mother died (also very common).
Like…
Obviously that wouldn’t be true. People had to be lactose tolerant before the food became a cultural norm. It would never catch on if it gave you diarrhea, not just because it was unpleasant, but that there’s still nutritional value from other foods there.
This isn’t a chicken and egg blurry line, one clearly had to have been before the other, and you’ve got it backwards.