CLEVELAND, OHIO—According to a Phys.org report, Paleolithic hunters may have thrown javelins from elevated positions to increase their effectiveness. Nam Kim of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Metin I. Eren of Kent State University and their colleagues tested the velocity and kinetic impact energy of both six-foot javelins and seven-foot darts thrown with an atlatl by launching the weapons from a scissor lift set at four different heights, ranging from ground level to about 30 feet. Measurements of the throws were taken with a high-speed camera. The experiment found that velocity and kinetic energy increased when the javelin was thrown from the highest position, but the velocity and kinetic impact energy of the darts thrown with the atlatl decreased as elevation increased. The researchers suggest that launching the darts downward from the elevation may have hindered the lever action of the atlatl, which outperformed the javelin on ground level. Paleolithic hunters may have therefore chosen atlatls when hunting in flat open environments, and javelins when trees or elevated terrain were present. The researchers also suggest that some Paleolithic populations may not have adopted atlatl technology because it would not have been effective in their environments. Read the original scholarly article about this research in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. To read more about evidence for early hunting, go to "Weapons of the Ancient World: Hunting Equipment."
Experiment Tests Javelins and Atlatl Effectiveness at Various Heights
News October 18, 2024
 
                        Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2019
You Say What You Eat
 
									Digs & Discoveries May/June 2025
Lay of the Land
 
									 
									Artifacts September/October 2024
Paleolithic Eyed Needles
 
									- 
											Features September/October 2024 Hunting for the Lost Temple of ArtemisAfter a century of searching, a chance discovery led archaeologists to one of the most important sanctuaries in the ancient Greek world  Courtesy Swiss School of Archaeology in Greece Courtesy Swiss School of Archaeology in Greece
- 
											Features September/October 2024 Trees of the Sky WorldWhy Australia’s Indigenous Wiradjuri people carved sacred symbols into trees to mark burials of their honored dead  Courtesy Caroline Spry Courtesy Caroline Spry
- 
											Features September/October 2024 The People Before the BookA trove of papyri unearthed on the Egyptian island of Elephantine gives voice to an early Jewish community  Bildarchiv Steffens/Bridgeman Images Bildarchiv Steffens/Bridgeman Images
- 
											Features September/October 2024 Pompeii StyleInside the Roman houses where archaeologists continue to discover evocative new masterpieces  Courtesy Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei Courtesy Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei
 
		 
								