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Did Cavemen Play Darts?

Did Cavemen Play Darts?
by Dr John V. Day
In
his book THE NEANDERTHAL QUESTION, Stan Gooch speculates that these early
humans, halfway between us and apes, would "practice their running and throwing,
and specifically compete with each other in these skills. Many of our
present-day pastimes (darts, pool, billiards, all track and field athletics)
probably derive their instinctive elements and psychological motivation from
these times."
Food from the hunting of
animals contributed even more to our ancestors? diet when humans migrated
northwards into Europe, where edible plants were less abundant yet huge herds of
animals like reindeer and bison lived on the plains, especially during the Ice
Ages. Early humans were using spears by at least 400,000 years ago, as suggested
by the two six-foot spruce spears found in 1997 at Schöningen in Germany, and
(because wood rots and destroys our evidence) probably long before that.
By the time our ancestors
were living in Europe during the last of the Ice Ages (and now looking just like
us, going by their bones), we find they had developed spear-throwers, the
earliest known example coming from France around 14,000 years ago. A
spear-thrower lengthens your arm, in effect, providing you with more leverage
and greater power, and experiments with them have killed deer at 30 yards. This
invention helped hunters: they could keep a safe distance from their prey and
could hunt alone, not needing to surround an animal to spear it.
As for bows and arrows, the
first direct evidence we have is either the 10,000 year-old wooden arrow-shafts
from northern Germany, found at the camp-sites of reindeer hunters, or what look
like stone arrow-heads from Spain, over 25,000 years old. (Bows, being made of
wood and sinew or gut, will easily perish.) If you hunt with a bow you can
remain hidden -- that's a big plus. And your arrow travels faster than a spear
does, and hits with more force when animals are far away. With a bow and arrow
you can kill your prey at over 80 yards.
These hunters over the last
few million years, whether using rocks, spears, or bows and arrows, must have
been males. Evolution has designed men to be good hunters. On average, they are
taller and stronger than women, and faster runners, too, ideally built for
chasing after wild animals which have a turn of speed. Out of 179 traditional
societies across the world which even today hunt animals for food, in no less
than 166 the hunting is done only by the men.
And according to
psychologists men are on average better at "visuo- spatial" tests than women
(who are better with words). This means that men tend to be good at analysing
what they see - finding patterns, noticing movements, judging distances. Again,
evolution has ensured that men possess this "visuo- spatial" ability -- vital
when confronting wild animals, judging their leaps and trying to avoid their
snarling jaws. You wanted them for your evening meal, and maybe they had the
same idea about you.
These days we are more
likely to buy a McDonalds than to go out hunting gazelle or reindeer. Still,
millions of years of hunting have impressed on us an enjoyment of aiming at
targets. In spite of living in cities and working in factories and offices we
still remain, in the words of anthropologists Lionel Tiger and Robin Fox, Ice
Age hunters who are "fine-honed machines for the efficient pursuit of game".
That hunting by aimed throwing was crucial in human evolution, as the
evolutionary psychologists Sue Taylor Parker and Kathleen Gibson point out, "is
also suggested by the ubiquity of aimed throwing games among human males".
Not without reason did Stan
Gooch call these distant ancestors of ours, living millions of years ago, “early
darts teams".
© 2002 Dr. John V. Day
Thanks to Dr. Day for
contributing this fascinating article to my website. I am more than happy to
consider other articles for inclusion on the site, provided they make a
contribution to our understanding of the history and development of the sport of
darts. Please send any items to me via the ‘Contact’ page.
Cartoon by kind permission
of David P Crane
© Patrick Chaplin 2007

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