past the fifth decade of life are such giants as elephants and finback whales. If you want to carry a lot of eggs, you need a very big basket.
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Whatever the constraints, there is nothing precocious about the senescence of our ovaries, Hawkes says. On that score, she agrees with the artifactualists: women go through menopause because women outlive their follicles. But she parts company with the artifactualists in their insistence that old age is a modern invention. To the contrary, old age is old news. Call us Homo maturus . Yes, people used to die young routinely, of infectious diseases, in the jaws of a leopard, or while giving birth to a fat-headed, rear-facing baby. But those who survived illness and accident very likely thrived to a respectable old age. The Bible puts our allotment at three score and ten, and that's not a bad figure, biologically speaking. We're built to last about seventy to eighty years. Add on the overengineering needed to push a sizable number of people toward that mark, and you get a century. Wherever you go, whatever industrialized, agrarian, or nomadic population you consider, you will find that one hundred years is pretty much the upper limit for the human lifespan. "This is the human pattern," Hawkes says, "and there's no reason to think that it wasn't true for our ancestors as well."
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What distinguishes women from other primates, then, isn't menopause but the long, robust life that women can lead after menopause. A chimpanzee at age forty-five or fifty not only has fading ovaries, she is fading globally. All her organs are faltering, and she is close to death. No matter that she has spent her life under the pampering ministrations of an American zoo, with the best medical care and all the bananas she can peel, a female chimpanzee will still be, at fifty, a decrepit animal. She will be the equivalent not of a menopausal woman but of a centenarian, blowing out the birthday candles to the cheers of Willard Scott.
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So while natural selection may have been hamstrung by ovarian physiology, unable to augment a woman's follicular capacity beyond the standard primate model, it has flexed its muscles rather floridly on a woman's lifespan. And now we must emphasize the her-ness of human longevity. Let us return to the role of grandmother, and let us gloat. Yes, any wizened elder can, as Jared Diamond suggests, serve as memoirist, botanist, and toxicologist to the clan. But is a good hippocampus worth enough to account for the ascent of the centenarian? Not likely. Life is lived by the day, and most days aren't Christmas. Just as hunting is an
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