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dipsydoodle

(42,239 posts)
Thu Nov 8, 2012, 06:29 AM Nov 2012

Lethal weapons may have given early humans edge over Neanderthals

Early humans wandered out of Africa armed with darts and arrows that made them formidable hunters and deadly competitors for any Neanderthals that stood in their way.

The revised version of the human story follows the discovery in South Africa of a haul of small stone blades or "bladelets" that formed lethal weapon tips, either for arrows fired from bows, or spears propelled from wooden throwers called atlatls.

Researchers uncovered more than 70 sharp stone tips measuring no more than 5cm long while excavating an eroded cliff face that overlooks the ocean at a site called Pinnacle Point on the south coast.

The development of the technology allowed early humans to attack wild animals or human foes from a greater distance and with more devastating effect. "People who possess light armaments that can be thrown long distances have immediate advantages in hunting prey and killing competitors," Curtis Marean, project director at Arizona State University, told the Guardian.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2012/nov/07/lethal-weapons-early-humans-neanderthals

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Lethal weapons may have given early humans edge over Neanderthals (Original Post) dipsydoodle Nov 2012 OP
Good story. Where are the bodies? Anthony McCarthy Nov 2012 #1
That brings new meaning to the phrase "killer apps". Odin2005 Nov 2012 #2
 

Anthony McCarthy

(507 posts)
1. Good story. Where are the bodies?
Thu Nov 8, 2012, 06:38 AM
Nov 2012

Making up stories about artifacts isn't science without physical evidence that that's what happened. There's way, way too much story telling in the absence of evidence these days.

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