Hunting Hypothesis 1


Hunting Hypothesis 1 : In paleoanthropology, the hunting hypothesis is the hypothesis that human evolution was primarily influenced by the activity of hunting for relatively large and fast animals, and that the activity of hunting distinguished human ancestors from other hominins. While it is undisputed that early humans were hunters, the importance of this fact for the final steps in the emergence of the Homo genus out of earlier Australopithecines, with its bipedalism and production of stone tools (from about 2. 5 million years ago), and eventually also control of fire (from about 1. 5 million years ago), are emphasized in the "hunting hypothesis", and de-emphasized in scenarios that stress the omnivore status of humans as their recipe for success, and social interaction, including mating behaviour as essential in the emergence of language and culture. Advocates of the hunting hypothesis tend to believe that tool use and toolmakingessential to effective hunting were an extremely important part of human evolution, and trace the origin of language and religion to a hunting context. As societal evidence Buss (2011) cites that modern tribal societies use hunting as their primary means of acquiring food. The Aka Pygmies in the Central African Republic spend 56% of their quest for nourishment hunting, 27% gathering, and 17% processing food
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