hominid

The End of Night

Columbian_Exposition .jpg

Over 60 million Americans have problems sleeping. While insomnia has many causes, one is the use of electric lighting. Our circadian rhythms developed from Earth’s 24-hour rotation. Toward the end of the day, the slowly fading sunlight allowed the brains of our hominid ancestors to prepare for sleep. Around 1 million years ago, hominids began to use fire and congregate around campfires for warmth and safety. Socialization increased. Eventually, cooking developed and led to further brain evolution.

The first lamps - made from moss or other plant material and animal fat placed in natural stone recesses - are tens of thousands of years old. Portable lamps fueled by animal fat, and later oil, were carried by Cro-Magnon into the deep recesses of the Lascaux and Altamira caves where they painted remarkable images of ice age fauna between 13,000-18,000 years ago.

First used around 400 AD, candles were an essential form of lighting for 1,500 years until the development of gas lights at the end of the eighteenth century. Candles could be linked together to create a spectacle:

In 1761, at the coronation of George III, groups of 3000 candles were connected with threads of gun cotton and lit in half a minute. Those clustered below were showered with hot wax and burning thread.

Campfires, oil lamps, candles, and gas lamps cast a dim light, and nighttime activity remained limited. However, at some point, night was effectively overcome. A pivotal landmark was Edison's invention of the long-lasting incandescent lamp in 1879. The first lasting 13.5 hours.

My pick for the year heralding the end of night is 1893, the year Nikoli Tesla lit up the night at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Following a prolonged rivalry with Edison on the most effective current for delivering electricity – direct current vs. alternating current - Tesla used long-lasting bulbs (by Westinghouse) and alternating current to create "the most spectacular display the world had ever seen."

The dawn of electric lighting was the Internet of its age: it changed everything. By using electricity, "daytime" could last all day long. We could work day and night.

Let's return to the sleep problem. Imagine you are heading to bed, and the light your the bedroom is bright. When ready for sleep, you turn off the current to the incandescent bulb(s) and fall into immediate darkness. With no time to prepare, your brain whispers: "What, you expect me to release this stuff immediately? Can you at least warn me?"

Normally, as daylight fades with the onset of the evening, melatonin is released (dis-inhibited) in the brain. Working in concert with a build-up of adenosine, they bring on sleep. While some people fall into a deep sleep quickly, even with the lights on, many of us need a slow transition from light to dark to prepare for restful sleep. In the modern world, electrons heat the bulb's filament causing it to glow and shower photons on our retinas - even through closed eyelids - thus keeping us awake. Today, we control the onset of "night." We need to be a little wiser in order to get the sleep we need.

John Oró

First posted July 8, 2014.
This version lightly edited.

PaleoTerran Enters Dormancy. Thanks.

Thank you for visiting PaleoTerran over the past couple of years! This is the last post before PaleoTerran enters dormancy. For now, the content will remain online. Hopefully someday, the site will reawaken.

A special thanks to John Michael and Leslie Why Reap for their contributions and encouragement.

For those new to Paleo/Primal health, the Start Here page provides some introductory articles and a few links. Much more is available by browsing or using the Search box or Categories menu.  

As noted in the previous post, 2013 & The Urge to Explore, we are entering a new era of exploration in search of new ideas, new directions, and new horizons. My online effort has shifted to the development of a new professional forum called Chiari Medicine. On occasion, I will post on Paleo/Primal health on the PrimalDocswebsite. 

Tautavel.jpg

This is one of my favorite images. Nestled in southern France, this stream runs below a cliff-side hominid cave occupied 400,000 years ago. Although the occupants were not our direct ancestors, the image takes us back to the Garden. Yes, there were threats. But also clean air, clean water, and a rich, productive environment.  And also, as Mark Sisson would likely say, it was, and remains, a great place to play. While we may not want to return to the Paleolithic, we don't want to loose the Terra we have. 

Human health and the health of our environment are fundamental to our future. Both are under threat. By taking care of ourselves using clues from our Paleolithic ancestors and by taking care of Terra, we become paleoterrans. Our hunter-gatherer ancestors were consummate explorers relying on cunning, physical skills and social bonds. In this spirit, let’s push forward to explorer new ideas, new directions, and new horizons.

Take care,

John J. Oró, MD