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Jeffrey Epstein Responds to New Study, Linking Environment with Evolution
A recent scientific study suggests that evolution may be triggered by environmental causes—a
finding that has won the attention offinancier and evolutionist. Jeffrey Epstein.
New York, New York, January 3, 2013—
According to the latest scientific evidence, it is likely that human evolution was spurred, in large
part, by environmental factors. A study conducted by researchers from Penn State and Rutgers
University reveals that rapid environmental shifts in Africa, some two million years ago, may
have provided the impetus for the beginnings of human evolution. The study has won the
attention of scientists from around the world, as well as scientific philanthropists like Jeffrey
Epstein.
Jeffrey Epstein—whose Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation has provided crucial funding to
evolutionary research programs across the world has weighed in on the new study with a
statement to the press. "The Penn State and Rutgers University study emphasizes that evolution
does not occur evenly through time, but rather in dramatic spurts through the course of nature's
history," Jeffrey Epstein remarks, in his press statement. The Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation
backs cutting-edge research and scientific inquiry around the world, and financed the yms-yital-in
establishment ofing the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard University, which
studies evolution through the lens of mathematics and biochemistry.
According to the new study's central hypothesis, changes to the landscape inhabited by early
human beings happened at rapid rates, fluctuating between closed woodlands and open
grasslands, again and again for a period of 200,000 years. This highly variable environment
ultimately led to a significant "drying" of Africa, which, according to the research team, was
likely a central factor in human evolution.
The researchers go on to say that, in as few as 10 human generations, early humankind went
from an experience of total woodedness to total openness—a dramatic shift that could have
spurred not only dietary shifts, but also more vigorous cognitive development.
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Jeffrey Epstein Responds to New Study, Linking Environment with Evolution Page 2
"Changes in food availability, food type, or the way you get food can trigger evolutionary
mechanisms to deal with those change," says Clayton Magill, a Penn State graduate student who
took part in the study.
For the study, researchers effectively reconstructed the different kinds of vegetation that may
have been present in Africa, centuries ago, using leaf waxes found in lake sediment. Gas
chromatography and mass spectrometry were used to chart the abundance of different types of
leaf wax.
The study has been heralded for bringing a greater "adaptive perspective" to the study of human
evolution.
ABOUT:
Jeffrey Epstein is a money manager and philanthropist whose passion is for investing in
scientific inquiry and education, throughout the world. Through the work of his Jeffrey Epstein
VI Froundation, he has made significant contributions to universities, hospitals, museums,
laboratories, individual scientists and numerous charitable organizations. He is also the organizer
of the Jeffrey Epstein Forum, an online avenue for the exchange and development of ideas
related to science, technology, economics, and culture. In addition to founding the Jeffrey
Epstein VI Foundation and the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard University,;
Jeffrey Epstein is a former member of Rockefeller University, the New York Academy of
Science, the Trilateral Commission, and the Council on Foreign Relations, and currently sits on
the board of the Mind, Brain and Behavior Committee at Harvard University.
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