Human ancestors living in Central Europe between 320,000 and 300,000 years ago may have used wooden spears to fend off fearsome, meat-eating rivals — saber-toothed cats.
researchers propose online October 23 in the Journal of Human Evolution.
Limited signs of wear on teeth from one saber-toothed cat, found about 100 meters from the spear excavation, indicate that the creature was relatively young. Pits, scrapes and other marks on the leg bone of an adult male, found in spear-bearing sediment, indicate that hominids used the bone as a hammer for making stone tools.
Replicas of the spears can be thrown accurately at prey from only about 30 to 40 meters away, a distance a motivated lion can cover in a few seconds, says archaeologist John Shea of Stony Brook University in New York. “If one wanted to drive off a big carnivore, it would have been much easier to bounce a rock off its head,” he says. So spears such as those from Schoningen may have been weapons of last resort for hominids threatened by large predators, Shea suggests.
Indications that hominids held off predators with the same spears used for hunting align with contentions that other ancient tools had many functions.
Author: Bruce Bower | Source: Science News [November 07, 2015]
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