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Cool article

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Pat B:
Very interesting article. Thanks for posting it, Paul.   :OK   )P(

Digital Caveman:

--- Quote --- I still wonder how they passed that technology across all the groups. Probably a lot more peaceful than they’re made out to be.
--- End quote ---

They had a long time to do it.  Notice that our world has changed more in the past hundred years than theirs did in millennia.  I think history telescopes,  Over enough time virtually any information will get spread around.  You could probably learn knapping form looking at your enemy's arrowheads, as well as from watching a friend

Looking at history, larger nations are more secure and peaceful inside.  This may mean that rival nomadic family bands would be constantly fighting.  As a more modern example, look at how much Native American tribes beat up on each other.  That would be like Minneapolis waging war on St. Paul.

Pappy:
Nice, I enjoyed that. Thanks for sharing. Pappy

Tradslinger:
 )P( slow and even ignorant doesn't mean stupid. it still blows me away as I learn more and more about how my ancesters made and used things. Just to survive in the wild is amazing but to thrive long enough to have decendants and form tribes. that requires understanding how to make adjustments to the moment's needs. Heck I get blown away by the things that were made hundreds and thousands or years ago with nothing but simple hand made tools. Heck even with modern tools of today, the craftsmanship can be terrible compared to theirs. these peoples had time to work slowly and get it done right and yet they didn't have time because of just trying to survive was a full time job. But obviously they figured out what worked and refined it to what they could to be quicker at it. I would have to say that peoples like this are the kings of capitalizing on the resources around them to survive. thanks Paul

Mesophilic:
Wish I could find the source, but saw a study done on the Neanderthal birch tar.

Chemically it resembled tar collected from rocks around a fire pit not the more refined tar made from dry distillation in an enclosed vessel.

I'm not trying to diminish their successes that allowed them to survive in harsh times, they just weren't quite the out of the box thinkers that homosapiens are.  There's reasons they disappeared when we arrived on the scene.

ETA: found a source on aerobic production of birch tar, published in PNAS
https://www.pnas.org/content/116/36/17707

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