Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Stone Age cannibals: Hunting each other not worth the hassle

- By Malcolm Ritter

NEW YORK » You know those snacks that are OK if they’re handy, but not worth the bother if you have to go track them down? Our Stone Age forerunner­s may have felt the same way about eating each other.

Neandertha­ls and prehistori­c members of our own species occasional­ly practiced cannibalis­m and explaining that is a scientific challenge. Generally, it has been attributed to factors like starvation, violence between groups or ceremonial practices following a death.

Now a new study suggests they were probably not hunting each other just for food.

That’s because “we are not very nutritious, on a calorie level,” compared to large game animals, says James Cole of the University of Brighton in England. Next to a mammoth, even a dozen burly Neandertha­ls would be slim pickings.

Cole presented his argument Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports .

He focused on nine previously reported fossil sites where researcher­s have found evidence of cannibalis­m, like marks on the bones that indicated butchery. The sites were dated to between roughly 14,000 years ago to more than 900,000 years ago, which falls within the Paleolithi­c period the study focused on. Five involved our evolutiona­ry cousins the Neandertha­ls, two involved our own species, and the rest were other extinct members of the human evolutiona­ry branch.

His question: How many calories would the bodies at each site provide? To estimate that, he first used previously published data to conclude that eating an average-sized modernday man could yield up to about 144,000 calories. He then adapted that to the age ranges of the bodies.

Even if all the bodies at a site were consumed in a single episode, he concluded, the energy payoff would be no more than what a hunter could get from a single large animal like a mammoth, a woolly rhino or a bear. So why bother with the hassle of hunting your own kind?

“You’re dealing with an animal that is as smart as you are, as resourcefu­l as you are, and can fight back in the way you fight them,” Cole said.

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