Precisely: you said 'many'. I said 'some', though. I think they were the minority of cases. Imo there is quite a difference between 'many' and 'some'...Digit wrote:Well that's what I said! I said many were one offs, not all.
Why do you believe that? Are there any indications that it was?
So if the Bow was a one off, as I believe it is supposed to have been,
According to this guy
and NA was cut off before it spread there, then people must have reached NA before the invention reached them!
(Boldface is mine.)Hunting flourished during the so-called middle part of the Upper Palaeolithic. In my opinion, this was promoted considerably by the improvement of hunting implements, particularly the ability to launch projectiles over a longer range after the bow was invented and brought into use between 30 000 and 25 000 b.p.
http://donsmaps.com/lioncamp.html
NA indians were 'cut off' from the rest of the world by the thawing sea ice packs at the end of the ice age: 10,000 BP!
So that was at least 15,000 years after the occurrence of the bow in the Ukraine...!
Yet the Beringian land bridge trekkers had no clue, and their descendents never had the brainwave to develop the bow themselves, indeependently. In ten thousand years!
A 'little unlikely'?
The alternative is that the colonisers of NA had the Bow and abandoned it when they crossed from Asia into the New World, which is a little unlikely.
I'd say that is extremely unlikely! Even downright stupid if they did that!
Yes.
If the Native Americans were a Stione Age people before Columbus then logically they made the crossing as Stone Agers, not that they abandoned metal working etc when they got there.
And they hardly developed since, while the rest of the world did. Like mad, to be sure.
Why? What's the big difference?