![]() I managed to get my hands on this video when I was in South Africa a couple of months ago, a hunter showed me and thought it was hilarious. The team behind the research is now looking to explore how sexual division of labour and its consequences in different times and places changed among hunter-gatherer populations in the Americas.The video was accompanied by the hashtag #stoptrophyhunting, and was shared with a message claiming that the video was taken in South Africa: The sample was sufficient to “warrant the conclusion that female participation in early big-game hunting was likely non-trivial,” the researchers said. Of those, 27 individuals were associated with big-game hunting tools – 11 were female and 15 were male. Looking at published records of late Pleistocene and early Holocene burials throughout North and South America, the researchers identified 429 individuals from 107 sites. The analysis also confirmed that the Wilamaya Patjxa female hunter as the earliest hunter burial in the Americas.įollowing the discovery, researchers questioned whether the Wilamaya Patjxa woman was part of a broader pattern of female hunters or a one-off. This was later confirmed by dental protein analysis conducted by UC Davis postdoctoral researcher Tammy Buonasera and Glendon Parker. ![]() ![]() Osteologist James Watson from the University of Arizona was part of the research team, and posited that the hunter was likely female. 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). The objects accompanying people in death tend to be those that accompanied them in life, the researchers said. In 2018, a team of researchers were undertaking archaeological excavations at Wilamaya Patjxa when they uncovered a burial site that included a hunting toolkit with projectile points and animal-processing tools. “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’,” Dr Haas said.īut it’s now clear that sexual division of labour was fundamentally different – likely more equitable – in our species’ deep hunter-gatherer past.” How it happened The findings also help to discredit justifications for modern sexist inequalities, such as the gender pay gap and the barring of women from leadership roles in some religious organisations. This stands in contrast to recent hunter-gatherers, and even farming and capitalist societies, where hunting is a decidedly male activity with low levels of female participation, Dr Haas said.ĭr Haas said the findings are “particularly timely in light of contemporary conversations surrounding gendered labour practices and inequality”. Statistical analysis of prehistoric burials in North and South America that somewhere between 30 to 50 per cent of hunters in these populations were female, the study found. Their findings, published this week in a paper titled Female Hunters of the Early Americas in the journal Science Advances, debunk the widespread belief that only males were hunters.Īn archaeological discovery and analysis of early burial practices overturns the long-held ‘man-the-hunter’ hypothesis,” co-author Dr Randall Haas said. ![]() Researchers from the University of California, Davis studied the remains of the woman and her tools unearthed by archaeologists in a high-altitude site known as Wilamaya Patjxa in Peru. ![]()
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