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HomeAncient HistoryHunter-gatherers were way more advanced on equality than modern humans

Hunter-gatherers were way more advanced on equality than modern humans

Hunter-gatherers were way more advanced on equality than modern humans
Hunter-gatherers were way more advanced on equality than modern humans
Illustration depicting female hunters who may have appeared around the Andes 9,000 years ago. (Credits: Matthew Verdolivo / SWNS)

Remains of a teenage girl who lived around 9,000 years ago have been discovered at a burial site in Peru alongside ‘a well-stocked, big-game hunting toolkit’.

Researchers say the findings, published in the journal Science Advances, challenges the hypothesis that prehistoric hunting was exclusively the domain of men, with women taking on the role of foragers.

Randy Haas, an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of California, Davis, US, and the lead author on the study, said: ‘An archaeological discovery and analysis of early burial practices overturns the long-held ‘man-the-hunter’ hypothesis.

‘Labour practices among recent hunter-gatherer societies are highly gendered, which might lead some to believe that sexist inequalities in things like pay or rank are somehow ‘natural’.

‘But it’s now clear that sexual division of labour was fundamentally different – likely more equitable – in our species’ deep hunter-gatherer past.’

This illustration from the study shows tools recovered from the burial pit floor including projectile points (1 to 7), unmodified flakes (8 to 10), retouched flakes (11 to 13), a possible backed knife (14), thumbnail scrapers (15 and 16), scrapers/choppers (17 to 19), burnishing stones (17, 20, and 21), and red ocher nodules (22 to 24).  (Credits: Randy Haas / UC Davis / SWNS)
This illustration from the study shows tools recovered from the burial pit floor including projectile points (1 to 7), unmodified flakes (8 to 10), retouched flakes (11 to 13), a possible backed knife (14), thumbnail scrapers (15 and 16), scrapers/choppers (17 to 19), burnishing stones (17, 20, and 21), and red ocher nodules (22 to 24). (Credits: Randy Haas / UC Davis / SWNS)

The remains of the female hunter were found in 2018 during archaeological excavations at a high-altitude site called Wilamaya Patjxa in Peru.

According to the researchers, the burial contains a ‘comprehensive array of hunting and animal processing tools that together provided unusually robust support for her hunter status’.

These tools include ‘stone projectile points for felling large animals, a knife and flakes of rock for removing internal organs, and tools for scraping and tanning hides’.

The sex of the human remains was confirmed by a protein analysis of the dental remnants while bone examination suggests she may have been between aged 17 to 19 at the time of her death.

Following what they describe as a ‘surprising discovery’, the researchers then looked at archaeological records of other burial sites throughout North and South America.

Archaeologists conduct excavations at Wilamaya Patjxa in Peru
Archaeologists conduct excavations at Wilamaya Patjxa in Peru. (AFP)

They found evidence of 27 individuals buried with big-game hunting tools – 11 female and 16 male.

Based on their findings, the team suggests that between 30% and 50% of big-game hunters who lived more than 10,000 years ago in the Americas may have been women.

Prof Haas said: ‘Our findings have made me rethink the most basic organisational structure of ancient hunter-gatherer groups, and human groups more generally.’

In this undated photo provided BY UC Davis to AFP on November 4, 2020, Archeologists conduct excavations at Wilamaya Patjxa in Peru. - A new study says a woman's place might never have been at home to begin with. Scientists said on November 4, 2020 they had discovered the 9,000 year-old remains of a young woman in the Peruvian Andes alongside a well-stocked big game hunting toolkit. Based on a further analysis of 27 individuals at burial sites with similar tools, a team led by Randall Haas at the University of California, Davis concluded that between 30 to 50 percent of hunters in the Americas during this period may have been women. (Photo by Randall Haas / UC Davis / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT
Archaeologists discovered the 9,000 year-old remains of a young woman in the Peruvian Andes alongside a well-stocked big game hunting toolkit. (AFP)

‘Among historic and contemporary hunter-gatherers, it is almost always the case that males are the hunters and females are the gatherers.

‘Because of this – and likely because of sexist assumptions about division of labour in western society – archaeological findings of females with hunting tools just didn’t fit prevailing worldviews.

‘It took a strong case to help us recognise that the archaeological pattern indicated actual female hunting behaviour.’