Researchers believe humans’ closest relatives may have stored meat from their kills for months before eating it
For hungry Neanderthals, there was more on the menu than wild mammals, roasted pigeon, seafood and plants. Chemical signatures in the ancient bones point to a nutritious and somewhat inevitable side dish: handfuls of fresh maggots.
The theory from US researchers undermines previous thinking that Neanderthals were “hypercarnivores” who stood at the top of the food chain with cave lions, sabre-toothed tigers and other beasts that consumed impressive quantities of meat.
Rather than feasting on endless mammoth steaks, they stored their kills for months, the scientists believe, favouring the fatty parts over lean meat, and the maggots that riddled the putrefying carcasses.
4g per kg of body weight is still a tremendous amount of meat.
Not especially. That’s 300g or 10.5 oz of meat for a 75kg person.
Assuming 7 grams of protein per ounce of beef, you'd need roughly 1.21 kgs of beef for a 75kg Neanderthal.
Ah, i misread your comment as saying 4g of meat/kg and not 4g of protein/kg. Thanks for the correction.