Some of the Earliest Modern Humans in Europe Used Bows and Arrows
upstart writes:
Bows and arrows were used in Europe much earlier than we thought:
Metz is part of a team that has been excavating a rock shelter called Grotte Mandrin in southern France. This shelter was used first by Neanderthals more than 80,000 years ago, and then by modern humans from about 45,000 years ago - around the time that modern humans displaced Neanderthals all across Europe.
But, last year, the team reported that, for a 40-year period around 54,000 years ago, Grotte Mandrin was used as a hunting camp by a small group of modern humans. The clinching evidence came from a baby tooth that isn't Neanderthal.
[...] Before now, the earliest unambiguous evidence for bows and arrows in Europe came from finds in Stellmoor, Germany, dating to around 10,000 years ago, says Metz. However, it was considered likely that the modern humans who displaced Neanderthals around 45,000 years ago had bows and arrows.
[...] Bows and arrows were first developed in Africa at least 70,000 years ago. Lombard and others have found stone and bone arrowheads at several sites in southern Africa dating back as far as this. The modern humans who moved out of Africa may have spread the technology around the world.
Despite presumably seeing bows in action, Neanderthals never developed them, says Metz. They kept using large, stone-tipped spears that were either thrust directly or thrown by hand, and so required close contact with their prey.
Journal Reference:
Laure Metz, Jason E. Lewi, and Ludovic Slimak, Bow-and-arrow, technology of the first modern humans in Europe 54,000 years ago at Mandrin, France, Sci Adv, 9, 2023. (DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.add4675)
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