Sorry, your thread looks like it has great information, but I want to make some quick points, before I take the time to read it more in depth.
Southwestern Europe is still shorter than Northern Europe, despite similar living standards and diets.
Likewise, diets can be pretty similar across most of Latin America, but their average heights aren't. There's also heavy meat and dairy consumption in some of those countries, but average height doesn't compare to Northern Europe.
Furthermore, if diet was the main component of height, Northern Europe would have kept a similar pace of growth. However,
like Japan, height increase has also basically slowed down to a halt there.
Just take a look at Finland, one of the most developed nations in Europe, with very heavy dairy consumption:
I don't think you are arguing that genetics isn't one of the main factors. You even include an allusion to that in your OP.
I just don't want more Bruces thinking they stunted 10cm off their height, despite being from middle-class families, around these parts.
Again, taking the example of Japan and Europe, some of their periods of fastest height increase included two world wars. Their economies are stronger than during wartime, and healthcare, plus access to it, is also much better than in those times. How can you conciliate that with the fact both groups have had their average height increase significantly slowed down over the last decades?
Malnutrition causes significant height stunting.
Not as good nutrition does
not cause significant height stunting.
Taking the example of the Dinka people, assumed to be the tallest in the world:
[...]181.3 cm [average height] in 227 Dinka Ruweng [was] measured in 1953–1954. However, it seems the stature of today's Dinka males is lower, possibly as a consequence of undernutrition and conflicts. An anthropometric survey of Dinka men, war refugees in Ethiopia, published in 1995 found a mean height of 176.4 cm.
So, war, famine, disease, and having to live life as refugees only stunted their average height by
4.9cm, and
most Africans and Asians already seem to have lower height heritability than Europeans.
The fantasies some people here have that they'd have been 6 feet tall instead of 5'6 if not for X are completely bogus. If you didn't undergo some form of famine, you didn't stunt your height in any significant way (>1.5cm). I just wanted to make that clear.
Populations around the world aren't all supposed to reach the same average height as long as they all keep the same nutrition and lifestyle over a century. That's a fairy tale.