Article 5A07D This ancient big-game hunter was a woman

This ancient big-game hunter was a woman

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Kiona N. Smith
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5A07D)
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At Wilamaya Patjxa, an archaeological site in southern Peru, archaeologists unearthed the skeleton of a young woman whose people buried her with a hunters' toolkit, including projectile points. The find prompted University of California Davis archaeologist Randall Haas and his colleagues to take a closer look at other Pleistocene and early Holocene hunters from around the Americas.

Their results may suggest that female hunters weren't as rare as we thought. And that, in turn, reminds us that gender roles haven't always been the same in every culture.

The hunter of Wilamaya Patjxa

The objects that accompany [people] in death tend to be those that accompanied them in life," Haas and his colleagues wrote. And when one young woman died 9,000 years ago in what is now southern Peru, her people buried her with at least six stone spear tips of a type used in hunting large prey like deer and vicuna (a relative of the alpaca). The points seem to have been bundled along with a stone knife, sharp stone flakes, scraping tools, and ocher for tanning hides.

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