| | Byron,
I'm not going to offer citations or anything, but just an anecdotal observation concerning your estimate of hunting advantage in modern man versus early homo sapiens.
You say that you and friends will go out hunting and spend all day killing enough game to feed you for the day.
Okay, I can buy that -- if you are hunting squirrel, rabbit or pheasant. But if you and your buddies were hunting deer, then even if only one person got his shot right, you must have had a hell of a large group to feed if a deer was only enough for a day.
Remember that there was a time -- and I'm not romanticizing it, I know it was brutal -- when the human community was relatively small and game was not rare. The plains tribes might have spent several days following the buffalo herd, but when they got into position, did their thing and the hunt was over, they weren't going back to the teepee with three squirrels in a sack, they were going back with literally hundreds of pounds of meat per animal. They learned how to cure and smoke it so that it lasted longer without spoiling ... and they used it all. Most of us these days aren't big on tripe, tongue, brain, chitlins ...
Presumably an Iroquois brave circa 1600 might go out hunting in the morning and find nothing all day. But the next day he might get his deer ... and that deer might feed his family for a week or a month.
I can see how primitive man might, in many environments, have had lots of time for leisure between hunts. This should explain those pre-Columbian dumps full of worn out large-screen TVs, threadbare recliners and empty Rolling Rock bottles.
Regards, Tom Knapp
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