Rabbit hunting ancient Americans may not have been macho after all
September 17th, 2008 - 2:41 pm ICT by ANIWashington, September 17 (ANI): A new research has revealed evidence that would dispel the macho image of Paleo-Indians as big-game hunters par excellence, suggesting that they relied more on rabbits for their food.
Paleo-Indians were the ancient peoples of the Americas who were present at the end of the last Ice Age.
Since archaeologists found Clovis points lodged in the skeleton of a mammoth, they have viewed Paleo-indians as big-game hunters par excellence.
Nearly every book on the subject includes an image of a brawny hunter thrusting his spear into the side of a trumpeting mammoth. This macho view of Paleoindian prehistory has prevailed even though surprisingly little evidence exists to support it.
Now, according to a report in the Columbus Dispatch, Kent State University archaeologist Mark Seeman and several co-researchers discovered blood residue on eight Clovis points.
Four were stained with the blood of a variety of relatively large mammals, including both cervid (caribou, deer or elk) and bison blood on one point, bison blood on another, bear blood on a third, and white-tailed deer blood on the fourth.
But the blood on the other four points was rabbit.
Seemingly disappointed with these results, Seeman and his colleagues attempted to downplay the rabbit blood and to emphasize the importance of the big game.
But, perhaps the predominance of rabbit blood on the Clovis points is telling us that Paleoindians weren”t so macho after all.
Among the Cree Indians of northern Ontario, for example, hare was one of the most important animals in their diet.
One Cree man told the anthropologist Bruce Winterhalder that his family had lived almost entirely on hare for most of one winter.
Hares typically are caught in snares that can be set by women and adolescents.
So, another reason why the importance of hare blood on Clovis points, or knives, should not be diminished is that it might provide a window onto the contributions of these often-forgotten members of Paleoindian societies. (ANI)
- New study challenges Clovis comet catastrophe theory - Sep 30, 2010
- Oldest American artefact unearthed dates back to 14,230 years - Nov 06, 2009
- Nebraska Deer Hunt To Begin, Officials Focus On Safety - Nov 13, 2010
- Terry Harrison's Deer Hunt Leads To Legal Turmoil - Dec 12, 2010
- Ice age graveyard reveals ancient mysteries - Jan 24, 2011
- Ancient bison bones supports theory about Ice Age seafarers being first in Americas - Mar 25, 2008
- Morristown, New York man arrested and charged for drunk driving - Feb 09, 2010
- Early humans shared meat differently 300,000 years ago - Aug 14, 2009
- Highways through Indian tiger reserves will destroy habitat - Apr 16, 2012
- Sophisticated hunters not to blame for driving mammoths to extinction - Nov 23, 2009
- Remains of woolly mammoth found in Russia - May 27, 2011
- No evidence of comet explosion over North America 13,000 years ago - Oct 13, 2009
- Lack of accommodation for 2010 football World Cup fans - Dec 08, 2009
- Neanderthals dried hunks of big game meat for easy transport - Jun 24, 2009
- An Ancient Site Utilized To Slaughter Bison Unveiled In Montana - Aug 10, 2010
Tags: ancient peoples, big game, bruce winterhalder, columbus dispatch, cree indians, deer blood, game hunters, hares, kent state university, last ice age, macho image, macho view, northern ontario, paleo indians, predominance, rabbit blood, rabbit hunting, seeman, snares, white tailed deer