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These Ingenious Weapons May Have Enabled Ice Age Hunters To Kill Mammoths
IFL Science ^ | August 22, 2024 | Benjamin Taub

Posted on 08/22/2024 5:30:35 AM PDT by Red Badger

You could never generate this amount of power yourself.

Mammoth hunts would have been incredibly dangerous.

Image credit: Esteban De Armas/Shutterstock.com

North American hunter-gatherers may have developed an innovative method for killing Ice-Age megafauna like mammoths, according to the authors of a new study. Rather than throwing spears at their prey, members of the iconic Clovis culture might have used “braced shaft weapons”, or pikes, to inflict catastrophic injuries on their victims.

“The key elements of the pike are a sharp tip for entering thick hide or armor and a long, sturdy shaft that could be braced in the ground to receive a charge with deadly force resistance,” write the researchers. In other words, the weapon was secured against the earth in order to harness the force of an onrushing animal, rather than relying on the throwing strength of the hunter.

"The kind of energy that you can generate with the human arm is nothing like the kind of energy generated by a charging animal,” explained study author Jun Sunseri in a statement. “It's an order of magnitude different.”

Inspiration for the study was provided by the mystery surrounding the so-called Clovis points, which have been found across North America and dated to between 13,050 and 12,650 years ago. Recognizable for their razor-sharp edges and fluted indentations, the spearheads are regularly retrieved from within the skeletons of mammoths and other Ice Age giants, although scholars are yet to agree over how they were used during hunts.

Replica Clovis points, showing their distinctive shape. Image credit: courtesy of Scott Byram

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Wondering if Clovis points might have been set on pikes, the study authors began by reviewing references to this type of weapon in the historical and ethnographic literature. As it turns out, the ancient Greek historian Xenophon reports the use of pikes for hunting large boar, while similar weapons were also employed against “Indian and African war elephants.”

“Pikes were used for well over two millennia to stop charging warhorses in battle,” write the researchers.

To discover how effective such weapons may have been for hunting large prey, the study authors employed a knapping expert to recreate a set of Clovis points, which they then hafted onto pikes. In a series of experiments, the researchers learned that the system functioned somewhat like a hollow-point bullet as the blade became detached from its shaft after penetrating an animal’s hide, ultimately causing “more massive injury than a thrust or launched spear can produce.”

High-speed camera images of force-test of Clovis-pointed spear

High-speed photo sequence during a test, showing how the stone point recedes into and splinters the pike shaft. Image credit: courtesy of Scott Byram

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The fact that the point tends to detach when used on a pike may also explain why Clovis points are often discovered inside mammoth skeletons that show no sign of having been butchered by humans. According to the researchers, some animals may have survived these attacks, yet would have been left with a blade lodged in their body for the rest of their lives.

Taken together, these various findings suggest that the Clovis people may well have used pikes rather than spears when hunting large animals. "This ancient Native American design was an amazing innovation in hunting strategies," says study author Scott Byram.

To develop their theory, the researchers are now planning to build a replica mammoth for use in further experiments with lithic pikes.

The study is published in the journal PLOS ONE.


TOPICS: History; Science; Society; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: clovis; godsgravesglyphs; mammoth; mammoths
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To: Red Badger
4% of Earth's vegetation was incinerated in the firestorms and shredded by impacts from the Ice Cap strikes, strikes that ejected very large chunks of ice very high, impact sites can be seen today in the Nebraska Rainwater Basins and in the Carolina Bays.

41 posted on 08/22/2024 12:18:27 PM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: libertylover
Did he say, "Hold ma beer"?

We know that the making of beer goes back to at least ancient Egypt so I think it is a distinct possibility.

If man was making beer at that time I can see alcohol fueled bad decisions spurred on by peer rivalry would definitely be a likely occurrence.

They were men after all. Men will be boys at the end of the day.

42 posted on 08/22/2024 1:27:52 PM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
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To: Red Badger
What does a mammoth eat for dinner?
Anything it wants to.
43 posted on 08/22/2024 5:36:02 PM PDT by Libloather (Why do climate change hoax deniers live in mansions on the beach?)
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To: Red Badger

That was one powerful miasma of misfortune swirling around that Thag. One must wonder how he and his existence helped shape today before lending his name to the thagomizer.


44 posted on 08/23/2024 7:16:35 AM PDT by gnarledmaw (Hivemind liberals worship leaders, sovereign conservatives select servants.)
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