• =?UTF-8?Q?Ancient_horse_hunts_challenge_ideas_of_=e2=80=98modern?= =?UTF-8?Q?=e2=80=99_human_behavior?=

    From Primum Sapienti@invalide@invalid.invalid to sci.anthropology.paleo on Thu May 1 21:16:46 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo


    More confirmation that water sources
    are great places to hunt...

    https://www.sciencenews.org/article/ancient-horse-hunters-behavior-modern

    On a bright, late-summer day in north-central
    Europe around 300,000 years ago, a team of
    perhaps a couple dozen hunters got into their
    assigned positions for a big kill.
    ...
    As the animals neared the lakeshore, hunters
    armed with wooden spears leaped out from
    hiding places in clumps of tall reeds and
    sedges. Uneven, sloshy lakeshore soil slowed
    the four-legged targets and kept them
    off-balance. Other hunters blocked escape
    routes. A frenzy of wooden-!-spear throwing and
    thrusting dispatched the entire horse family.

    This unusually detailed reconstruction of an
    ancient communal hunt and its aftermath comes
    from a new analysis of an archaeological site
    in Germany called Sch||ningen. The latest
    findings at the site, which has been excavated
    over the last 30 years, fuel a growing
    conviction that a flair for planning and
    collaboration comparable to that of people
    today arose far earlier in our evolution than
    traditionally thought.
    ...


    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0047248424000988
    Persistent predators: Zooarchaeological
    evidence for specialized horse hunting at
    Sch||ningen 13II-4

    Abstract
    The Sch||ningen 13II-4 site is a marvel of
    Paleolithic archaeology. With the
    extraordinary preservation of complete
    wooden spears and butchered large mammal
    bones dating from the Middle Pleistocene,
    Sch||ningen maintains a prominent position
    in the halls of human origins worldwide.
    Here, we present the first analysis of the
    complete large mammal faunal assemblage
    from Sch||ningen 13II-4, drawing on
    multiple lines of zooarchaeological and
    taphonomic evidence to expose the full
    spectrum of hominin activities at the
    siterCobefore, during, and after the hunt.
    Horse (Equus mosbachensis) remains dominate
    the assemblage and suggest a recurrent
    ambush hunting strategy along the margins
    of the Sch||ningen paleo-lake. In this
    regard, Sch||ningen 13II-4 provides the first
    undisputed evidence for hunting of a single
    prey species that can be studied from an
    in situ, open-air context. The Sch||ningen
    hominins likely relied on cooperative hunting
    strategy to target horse family groups, to
    the near exclusion of bachelor herds. Horse
    kills occurred during all seasons, implying a
    year-round presence of hominins on the
    Sch||ningen landscape. All portions of prey
    skeletons are represented in the assemblage,
    many complete and in semiarticulation, with
    little transport of skeletal parts away from
    the site. Butchery marks are abundant, and
    adult carcasses were processed more thoroughly
    than were juveniles. Numerous complete,
    unmodified bones indicated that lean meat and
    marrow were not always so highly prized,
    especially in events involving multiple kills
    when fat and animal hides may have received
    greater attention. The behaviors displayed at
    Sch||ningen continue to challenge our
    perceptions and models of past hominin
    lifeways, further cementing Sch||ningen's
    standing as the archetype for understanding
    hunting adaptations during the European Middle
    Pleistocene.
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