8999 BC
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There were those little flinger things that they'd put little spears on. Those might be considered proto arrows.
Yeah, atlatls had fletched arrows
Would love to do some atlatl throwing again, not really sure if there is a way to legally do it in the park or somewhere like that though and my garden is far too short for it.
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When were arrows invented, though?
About three years into Youtube. Everybody missed this Easter egg.
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Would love to do some atlatl throwing again, not really sure if there is a way to legally do it in the park or somewhere like that though and my garden is far too short for it.
I wonder if a local archery range would let you do it. Probably have to byoa though
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I wonder if a local archery range would let you do it. Probably have to byoa though
I looked up a while back, the nearest NFAS club is miles away and not sure if they would allow atlatls or not.
You can get rubber blunt arrowheads though, pretty sure that could be used in public just fine as its not like its a weapon. Go for a quiet spot so that no one is really aware of it in the first place and they can't complain.
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Blah blah bc time is backward, 9,000 is older than 8,999, now that we have that out of the way I wonder how they calculate the invention of the bow. Like they just haven't found one anywhere older then that. It's just green sticks and ropes at some point. Wonder what the chances are there was something prior that we don't know because it wasn't built long enough to last.
There’s always big error bars on these dates for that kind of reason. Actual archeologists are going to be careful with their language and say things like “the earliest evidence we have for bows is around 9000 BCE.”
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9000+ BC - no arrow heads
8999 BC to present - butt loads of arrowheads
We have "arrowheads" as old as 72000 years old. Some found outside of Africa are 40ish thousand years old. We're not certain what these objects are, but we're pretty sure they're arrowheads.
The oldest evidence for a bow we've found is only 9000 years old. But if you think about what a bow is made of, it stands to reason that we wouldn't find one much older than that.
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Blah blah bc time is backward, 9,000 is older than 8,999, now that we have that out of the way I wonder how they calculate the invention of the bow. Like they just haven't found one anywhere older then that. It's just green sticks and ropes at some point. Wonder what the chances are there was something prior that we don't know because it wasn't built long enough to last.
They may have been mentioned/featured in things that last longer than the bows. Statues, pottery, writing on stone tablets.
Also I think they find skeletons with flint arrowheads in them sometimes too.
So it can be pieced together from lots of small, even partial data points.
But we find new stuff all the time that changes what we thought.
They found a 4000 year old bagless vacuum cleaner the other day.
That last one was a joke.
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When were arrows invented, though?
About 300 years after the invention of the bow, which is crazy.
It meant that the value of archers was really low from a military point of view. Those nerds were useless.
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It just says they were invented in 9k BC. That does exclude them also having been invented in 10k BC.
Edit: *doesn't exclude
SorryThey were invented *by 9k bc
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They may have been mentioned/featured in things that last longer than the bows. Statues, pottery, writing on stone tablets.
Also I think they find skeletons with flint arrowheads in them sometimes too.
So it can be pieced together from lots of small, even partial data points.
But we find new stuff all the time that changes what we thought.
They found a 4000 year old bagless vacuum cleaner the other day.
That last one was a joke.
They found a 4000 year old bagless vacuum cleaner the other day.
Yeah, it's common knowledge that the bagless feature was introduced 3200 years ago.