If the experts are to be believed, this is caused by spending too much time in the sun, or on sunbeds, without the protection of sunscreen.
According to scientists, humans have lived on earth for at least 276,000 years. For most of that period clothing was scant, limited to animal skins slung around the body at best, and solid housing was non-existant.
In the 1940s the first effective sunscreen was invented. However, sunscreens were not widely recommended - except for advertising - until the late 1960s. And most sunscreens block the UVB rays that promote Vitamin D3, but not the melanoma-causing UVA rays.
Stephan wrote a very instructive blog about this last year.
My parents' generation - born almost a century ago - spent many hours out of doors thoughout their lives, without sunscreen. They swam in the sea and lakes, walked in the countryside for miles, gardened [my dad was a professional gardener/groundsman], played tennis and cricket for hours on end, all without sunscreen. I don't know of a single one of their relatives/friends/acquaintances who developed skin cancer.
The sun is no hotter now, so what has changed since the 1970s?
Take food consumption:
- Animal fats down dramatically
- Lean poultry up
- Fatty beef down
- Full-cream milk down by about 75%
- Butter down by more than 50%
- Polyunsaturated vegetable oils more than doubled
- Sugars almost doubled
- Grain up by more than 50%
Are we eating ourselves to death?
