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130-year-old India discovers the world's longest-lived man (2002-07-31 10:34 Dayang Forum) According to residents of Brown village in Himachal Pradesh, northern India, the old lady living in this village, Davgie Devy, is at least 130 years old. If her age could be confirmed, she would be the longest-lived person in the world, 14 years older than one of the world's longest-lived Chinese women known.
Chandigarh City lawyer Dineshi Kumar recently told ** that although Devi does not have a birth certificate, her family history suggests that she is at least 130 years old. He said that Devi gave birth to his eldest daughter when he was 25 years old, his eldest daughter married at the age of 20, and gave birth to a son, Keshav Lam, at the age of 28, and now Lam is 80 years old. Kumar said he began investigating Devi's family history three months ago and found two important pieces of evidence of her age.
First of all, one of her grandchildren is 80 years old. Secondly, one of her surviving sons is 102 years old. Devi is still sturdy, and she can still go up the hill to collect firewood on her own.
She said that she drank two glasses of milk a day, ate a millet loaf, and only went to the hospital twice in her life. (Xinhua News Agency).
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1. The longest-lived woman in history: The longest-lived woman in history with conclusive documentary evidence is Jeanne Louise Calment of France. He was born on February 21, 1875 and died on August 4, 1997, at the age of 122 years and 164 days.
2. The longest-lived man in history: Chiyo Izumishige, a Japanese, was born on June 29, 1864 and died on February 21, 1986, at the age of 120 years and 237 days. 3. The personal documents of a Lebanese woman named Hamida Mussolmani indicate that she was born in 1877, which puts her on track to become the world's longest-lived person.
4. One of the longest-lived people with certificates: Du Pinhua, a 120-year-old man at Wutong Bridge in Leshan, Sichuan Province, China, was 116 years old in 2002 and obtained a certificate issued by the Guinness Headquarters of Shanghai Great World and was recognized as the world's longest-lived person. 5. The second longest-lived person with a certificate:
In 2005, the Guinness Book of World Records declared Emiliano Mercado del Toro, then 114 years old Puerto Rican citizen, the world's longest-lived man, who celebrated his 115th birthday on August 21, 2006, at his home in the town of Isabella, Puerto Rico. 6. It is said that the world's longest-lived person: An old Chinese medicine doctor named Li Qingyun, a vegetarian, is said to have been born in 1677 and died in 1933 at the age of 256.
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Li Qingyuan is the longest-lived person in the world, living 256 years.
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The longest living man in the world. It was Chen Jun, who lived to be 443 years old. Lived 443 years. Tang Dynasty was born, Yuan Dynasty died. I don't believe you can check for yourselves, it's true.
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How long do we really live?
American scientists believe that even with the continuous progress of science, it will be difficult for humans to live up to 100 years, and it will not become a reality for at least the next century. The average life expectancy of people born in this century is 85 years.
Oleshanski, a professor of public health at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said there is no miracle drug, hormone, antioxidant, genetic engineering or biotechnology in the world today that could increase human lifespan to 120 or 150 years, as some have predicted. Heflick, an expert on longevity at the University of California, San Francisco, completely agrees with Oleshanski, saying that the claim of "super-longevity" of human beings is simply "nonsense".
But Oleshansky does not deny that there are some facts that are still encouraging. He said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Development of Science in San Francisco that since 1900, the average life expectancy of humans has increased by 30 years due to improved medical care. For example, the life expectancy of an American girl born in 1900 is only years, while that of a girl born in 1995 has reached 79 years.
In a report published in an upcoming issue of the journal Science, Oleshanski said that babies born in France and Japan would not live to be 100 years old until at least 200 years later; Babies born in the U.S. won't be able to join the centenarian club until 600 years later. The reason for this difference is that the rate of decline in mortality varies among the three countries. From 1985 to 1995, the death rate in France fell, in Japan and only in the United States, and according to this data, the average life expectancy of French people will reach 85 years by 2033, Japan is 2035, and the United States is 2182.
According to the records, the person who lived the longest to date was a French woman named Calmet, who died in 1997 at the age of 1997. The Queen Mother of England is also one of the few examples of longevity. According to Professor Heflick, life expectancy and life expectancy are two different concepts.
Lifespan refers to how long a person can live; Life expectancy, on the other hand, refers to how many years a person born in a given year is expected to live on average. The maximum lifespan of a human being is about 125 years. Even if the most common causes of death in humans, such as cancer, heart disease and stroke, are eliminated, life expectancy will increase by up to 15 years, and then people will die from aging.
He believes that the next big leap in human lifespan will only come if biological researchers discover how to slow down the aging process and make this discovery work for all of humanity.
Oleshansky said that the most realistic approach at the moment is to study how to extend the healthy period of human beings. Today, the health of a 65-year-old is the same as that of a 60-year-old in 1960. For humans, the quality of life may be more important than how long they live.
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Since industrialization, people's average life expectancy has nearly doubled, and even "centenarians" have become no longer uncommon.
The longest-lived woman in history: The longest-lived woman in history with conclusive documentation is Jeanne Louise Calment of France. He was born on February 21, 1875 and died on August 4, 1997, at the age of 122 years and 164 days. >>>More
Who is the longest-lived person in the world? I didn't know that people could live so long!