The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer?inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter and spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters and snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St. Catherines Island and compared them with live oysters and snails. They found that island
What did they eat in summer?
DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter and spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer?
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters and snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St. Catherines Island and compared them with live oysters and snails. They found that island
Silence from the mermaid squad....What did they eat in summer?
Maybe they stockpiled them :-DDDDDD
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters and snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St. Catherines Island and compared them with live oysters and snails. They found that islandinhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter and spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
What did they eat in summer?
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htminhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter and spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters and snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St. Catherines Island and compared them with live oysters and snails. They found that island
What did they eat in summer?
Op donderdag 4 november 2021 om 06:34:28 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter and spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htmSee my comment there:
"Thanks a lot, very interesting.
Human ancestors collected shellfish at least since the beginning of the Pleistocene - most likely, this is how they began using stone tools (cf sea-otters), google e.g. "coastal dispersal Pleistocene Homo PPT".
I'm wondering whether they collected more or other shellfish during Interglacials than during Glacials?"
Did H.erectus dive more during Glacials?
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters and snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St. Catherines Island and compared them with live oysters and snails. They found that island
-What did they eat in summer?Only incredible idiots are convicned that H.erectus (stone tools, larger brain, pachy-osteo-sclerosis, platycephaly etc.) were no slow+shallow divers for shellfish.
Op donderdag 4 november 2021 om 06:34:28 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter and spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters and snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St. Catherines Island and compared them with live oysters and snails. They found that island
I couldn't resist sending another comment:are extremely rich in brain-specific nutrients such as DHA (decosahexaenoic acid) etc. Shelfish consumption not only explains why Pleistocene Homo evolved larger brains, but also why they began using stone tools (parallels with sea-otters), and why they
"Your article might help understand why human evolution from australopith-like to archaic Homo only began in the Pleistocene, when temperatures dropped, and more shellfish for human collection & consumption became available. Shellfish & other sea-foods
-What did they eat in summer?Running after antelopes?
:-DDD
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
See my comment there: "Thanks a lot, very interesting.
Human ancestors collected shellfish at least since the beginning of the Pleistocene - most likely, this is how they began using stone tools (cf sea-otters), google e.g. "coastal dispersal Pleistocene Homo PPT".
I'm wondering whether they collected more or other shellfish during Interglacials than during Glacials?"
Did H.erectus dive more during Glacials?
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters & snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St.Catherines Island, and compared them with live oysters & snails:
island inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter & spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
What did they eat in summer?
Only incredible idiots are convinced that H.erectus (stone tools, larger brain, pachy-osteo-sclerosis, platycephaly etc.) were no slow+shallow divers for shellfish.
So, what did they eat in summer, when the water warmed comfortably?
Op dinsdag 16 november 2021 om 01:38:20 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
See my comment there: "Thanks a lot, very interesting.
Human ancestors collected shellfish at least since the beginning of the Pleistocene - most likely, this is how they began using stone tools (cf sea-otters), google e.g. "coastal dispersal Pleistocene Homo PPT".
I'm wondering whether they collected more or other shellfish during Interglacials than during Glacials?"
Did H.erectus dive more during Glacials?
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters & snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St.Catherines Island, and compared them with live oysters & snails:Only incredible idiots are convinced that H.erectus (stone tools, larger brain, pachy-osteo-sclerosis, platycephaly etc.) were no slow+shallow divers for shellfish.
island inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter & spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
What did they eat in summer?
So, what did they eat in summer, when the water warmed comfortably?What we ate before domestication: rice
We live in an interglacial: that's why our anatomy is not "archaic" any more.
It's incredible that there are still PAs who believe their Pleistocene ancestors ran after antelopes.
These are no scientists, but incredible idiots.
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
See my comment there: "Thanks a lot, very interesting.
Human ancestors collected shellfish at least since the beginning of the Pleistocene - most likely, this is how they began using stone tools (cf sea-otters), google e.g. "coastal dispersal Pleistocene Homo PPT".
I'm wondering whether they collected more or other shellfish during Interglacials than during Glacials?"
Did H.erectus dive more during Glacials?
What does 1ma H erectus in the Old World have to do with 4,300 year old New World shell middens of shells harvested during the months containing "R"?
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters & snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St.Catherines Island, and compared them with live oysters & snails:
island inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter & spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
What did they eat in summer?
Only incredible idiots are convinced that H.erectus (stone tools, larger brain, pachy-osteo-sclerosis, platycephaly etc.) were no slow+shallow divers for shellfish.
What does 1ma H erectus in the Old World have to do with 4,300 year old New World shell middens of shells harvested during the months containing "R"?
So, what did they eat in summer, when the water warmed comfortably?
What we ate before domestication: rice
Rice is a domesticated plant unavailable to AMHs in that region 4.3ka.
, vegetables, fish, meat
Hunted or scavenged?
& shellfish when available...
We live in an interglacial: that's why our anatomy is not "archaic" any more?
It's incredible that there are still PAs who believe their Pleistocene ancestors ran after antelopes.
Antelope were unavailable to AMHs in that region 4.3 ka. Relevance?
These are no scientists, but incredible idiots.
I know who is a scientist and who claims to be a scientist.
Op dinsdag 16 november 2021 om 12:21:54 UTC+1 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:
The R months: oyster harvesting only non-summer? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191120175609.htm
See my comment there: "Thanks a lot, very interesting.
Human ancestors collected shellfish at least since the beginning of the Pleistocene - most likely, this is how they began using stone tools (cf sea-otters), google e.g. "coastal dispersal Pleistocene Homo PPT".
I'm wondering whether they collected more or other shellfish during Interglacials than during Glacials?"
Did H.erectus dive more during Glacials?
What does 1ma H erectus in the Old World have to do with 4,300 year old New World shell middens of shells harvested during the months containing "R"?What not??
Equids 20 Ma ate grass, horses today still do.
Cannarozzi and Kowalewski, Thompson Chair of Invertebrate Paleontology, analyzed oysters & snails from a 230-foot-wide, 4,300-year-old shell ring on St.Catherines Island, and compared them with live oysters & snails:
island inhabitants were primarily harvesting oysters during late fall, winter & spring, which also suggested the presence of people on the island tapered off during the summer
What did they eat in summer?
No answer, of course.Only incredible idiots are convinced that H.erectus (stone tools, larger brain, pachy-osteo-sclerosis, platycephaly etc.) were no slow+shallow divers for shellfish.
What does 1ma H erectus in the Old World have to do with 4,300 year old New World shell middens of shells harvested during the months containing "R"?Think a bit, my boy, instead of asking ridiculous questions.
So, what did they eat in summer, when the water warmed comfortably?
What we ate before domestication: rice
Rice is a domesticated plant unavailable to AMHs in that region 4.3ka.Wild rice?
Humans, gorillas & bonobos wade bipedally for waterlilies.
, vegetables, fish, meat
Hunted or scavenged?Nets, dogs, spears, traps...
& shellfish when available...
Salmon, cray-, shellfish: the most delicious & healthy foods.
We live in an interglacial: that's why our anatomy is not "archaic" any more?
It's incredible that there are still PAs who believe their Pleistocene ancestors ran after antelopes.
Antelope were unavailable to AMHs in that region 4.3 ka. Relevance?4.3 ka is no Pleistocene?
These are no scientists, but incredible idiots.
I know who is a scientist and who claims to be a scientist.Yes, my boy, the endurance running "scientists" are no scientists.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 463 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 156:43:15 |
Calls: | 9,384 |
Calls today: | 4 |
Files: | 13,561 |
Messages: | 6,095,909 |