Archaeologists armed with spears demonstrate how Neanderthals hunted
A new experimental archaeology study reconstructs Neanderthal hunting tactics.
KIONA N. SMITH - 6/28/2018, 8:30 AM
How did Neanderthals hunt?
Animal bones at several Neanderthal sites bear the telltale marks of butchery, but theres little evidence of how, exactly, Neanderthals brought down their prey.
We have hardly any evidence for weaponry before 40,000 years ago. The only obvious evidence so farand even here not all archaeologists agreeare wooden spears or lances known from three sites only. Considering that hominins probably started hunting as early as 1.8 million years ago, evidence is meager, Johannes GutenbergUniversity Mainz archaeologist Sabine Gaudzinski-Windheuser told Ars Technica.
Archaeologists found the pointed tip of a 400,000-year-old wooden staff at a site in Clacton, England, once inhabited by Neanderthals earlier relatives, Homo heidelbergensis, and several sharpened wooden sticks turned up at a 300,000-year-old site in Schöningen, Germany. But archaeologists arent sure exactly how Neanderthals and H. heidelbergensis would have used their early weapons or how their approach would have compared to early Homo sapiens tactics.
Some modern hunter-gatherers still wield very similar wooden spears, which they either thrust or throw at their prey, depending on the terrain and the situation. Archaeologists are fairly sure thats what early H. sapiens were doing, too. Understanding more about how Neanderthals huntednot just the weapons they used, but their techniques and tacticscould help us better understand how competition for food and territory played out when humans and Neanderthals met.
More:
https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/06/archaeologists-armed-with-spears-demonstrate-how-neanderthals-hunted/