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posted by martyb on Sunday February 03 2019, @07:47AM   Printer-friendly
from the YOU-try-sneaking-up-and-stabbing-a-wild-animal dept.

Archaeologist Annemieke Milks' recently published study, albeit done in 2015, suggests that some extinct hominids probably didn't just stab prey from a close distance, but may have also occasionally threw spears. The study had a group of athletes, particularly strong javelin throwers, throw replicas of a 300,000-year-old wooden spear, one of nine ancient hunting tools discovered at Germany's Schöningen coal mine, at a bale of hay for accuracy.

Many researchers have suspected that Neandertals or their ancestors snuck up on and stabbed prey with the pointed wooden rods. That idea aligns with a popular assumption that Stone Age Homo sapiens had a monopoly on hurling spears at prey. Yet bodies capable of accurate and powerful throwing may have emerged nearly 2 million years ago in Homo erectus (SN Online: 6/26/13). So why not Neandertals?

Now data from high-speed video cameras at Milks' unusual throw-off, held in January 2015 and reported online January 25 in Scientific Reports, suggest that Neandertals might have used the spears for long-range hunting.


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  • (Score: 2) by Arik on Monday February 04 2019, @12:07AM

    by Arik (4543) on Monday February 04 2019, @12:07AM (#795890) Journal
    The question is not if you're paranoid, the question is if you're paranoid *enough.*
    --
    If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
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