Publication | Open Access
Female hunters of the early Americas
146
Citations
118
References
2020
Year
American ArchaeologyArchaeologyHuman-wildlife RelationshipSocial SciencesBioarchaeologyGender StudiesPrehistoryLanguage StudiesArchaeological EvidenceEarly HunterSecure Hunter BurialPaleoanthropologyFeminist TheoryHuman EvolutionSexual DivisionEvolutionary BiologyAnthropologyWildlife BiologyFemale Hunters
Sexual division of labor with females as gatherers and males as hunters is a major empirical regularity of hunter-gatherer ethnography, suggesting an ancestral behavioral pattern. We present an archeological discovery and meta-analysis that challenge the man-the-hunter hypothesis. Excavations at the Andean highland site of Wilamaya Patjxa reveal a 9000-year-old human burial (WMP6) associated with a hunting toolkit of stone projectile points and animal processing tools. Osteological, proteomic, and isotopic analyses indicate that this early hunter was a young adult female who subsisted on terrestrial plants and animals. Analysis of Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene burial practices throughout the Americas situate WMP6 as the earliest and most secure hunter burial in a sample that includes 10 other females in statistical parity with early male hunter burials. The findings are consistent with nongendered labor practices in which early hunter-gatherer females were big-game hunters.
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