By a remarable coincidence I am watching a TV programme about atlatl darts versus a big boy's spears against a Columbian mammoth.
First both spear types were used on a side of beef at about 30ft, and the atlatl dart penetrated deeper, then they were used as thrusting weapons, and the spear won.
Next they put a piece of Elephant hide onto a frame, half the atlatl darts bounced off! This by the way was minus the subcuntaneous fat!
The weapons used were Clovis copies.
The conclusion the experts came to was the only way to kill such a beast was to crawl under it and stab upwards!!!
I kid you not!
The only part of the show that made sense was the statement that atlatl darts lacked the mass/inertia to penetrate.
Now what they didn't say. An atlatl dart from 30ft did not penetrate deep enough to reach any vital organs, neither did the spear, hence the stab it in the guts idea.
An atlatl dart slammed into the muscles would probably piss the animal off IMO, and the one point totally ignored was the size of wound inflicted by the spear, in all the sims the shafts stayed as they struck. Now the big boy's spear is about 5-6ft long, inch and half-two inches in dia witha slab of rock on the end. IMO the shaft will droop, enlarging the wound, if it remained in place for a while every movement of the animal is going to enlarge that wound.
Further I see no reason why each hunter would be limited to a single spear.
Withing two minutes my animal would look like a Porcupine and be bleeding and in pain from dozens of wounds.
And no need for Kamikazi hunters either.
Roy.
First people deny a thing, then they belittle it, then they say it was known all along! Von Humboldt