Cavewomen.Cavemen: what did they do in their spare time?

Cavewomen.Cavemen: what did they do in their spare time?
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wj0qx56c ... re=related[/youtube]Xamonas Chegwé wrote:Cavewomen.Cavemen: what did they do in their spare time?
Lack of running water and soap?Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Why do they always show cavepersons so dirty?
No lack of running water, only a moron makes camp when there's no water available unless the situation is dire. As for soap, just scraping dirt off with the nails is better than having itchy, vermin ridden skin. I know this.Coito ergo sum wrote:Lack of running water and soap?Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Why do they always show cavepersons so dirty?
Fucking dinosaurs (current models) bathe.Animavore wrote:I thought rivers were running water
I've never seen indigenous types so dirty. Even fucking monkeys groom themselves.
By running water, I meant in their homes to bathe with. Obviously a stream is around, but that requires people to hoof it to the stream.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:No lack of running water, only a moron makes camp when there's no water available unless the situation is dire. As for soap, just scraping dirt off with the nails is better than having itchy, vermin ridden skin. I know this.Coito ergo sum wrote:Lack of running water and soap?Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Why do they always show cavepersons so dirty?
How so? It just explains why they look dirty.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:That's the pampered view taken care of.
Dude, if you can't understand why people would tend to be dirtier because they have less access to water and soap, and do a lot of "scraping of vermin" off of their skin with their nails, then I can't help you. There is a difference in how clean you can get by scraping the dirt and vermin off of you with fingernails or eating the lice out of each other's hair, than by having a bath with soap and water.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Hot water? Really? And it's perfectly possible to get clean using only running water, unless you've been soaking raw petroleum or something similar.
Hot water.
Anthropologists who've studied extant hunter-gatherer societies. People did/do fine without modern amenities if they've grown up without them.Seth wrote:Estimated by whom, pray tell? Somebody who's never spent a day in the wilderness trying to survive without modern amenities?Pappa wrote:It's been estimated that hunter-gatherers use only four hours a day on all their practical needs, including hunting and gathering, making and repairing their tools/weapons/equipment/dwellings.
You're kidding me right? They spent weeks, months or years living with hunter-gatherers and studying them. There are researchers still doing the same right now and there's an awful lot of literature out there on the subject.Seth wrote:And they would know this how, exactly?Lots of anthropological reports also show that hunter-gatherers spend quite a lot of time lazing about.
Seth wrote:and I'm sure tracking game and hunting is a pretty enjoyable type of "work".
Ever tried it? It's only enjoyable when your life does not depend on finding, stalking and killing wild animals every day. It's a sport today because if you don't get your elk or deer, you can always go back to camp and open a can of beans. Even at that it's pretty frustrating to spend hours stalking an elk with a bow and arrow (and yes, I've done it) only to have the damned thing spook as you draw your bow and disappear at top speed over the ridge in the distance faster than you could possibly imagine.
Seth wrote:Hunting for food is an all-the-time thing for a group which depends on fresh meat for survival. That's why "gathering" became part of the culture. It's way easier to harvest food that doesn't run away from you, and it stores better.
As I said above, hunting "big game" is not a requirement. Rabbits, birds and small mammals don't require much in the way of dressing and transporting. Plus, have you ever seen the tallent people like the Hadza show at tracking, or read about the Native Americans' tracking skills. Their ability to identify and follow tracks and spoor make even most experienced western hunters look like children stumbling about in the woods.Seth wrote:Clearly you've never spent the day busting ass over the ridges and through the woods looking for something to shoot with your bow or stab with your spear. If you had, you'd understand that hunting is a high-calorie, high-energy activity. Even if you're still-hunting, which means concealed in a stand somewhere, like near a water hole, waiting for game to come drink if you succeed in killing something, then you have to field-dress it and then transport it back to camp, which is always the hardest part of big-game hunting. Took me two whole days to pack out one elk I killed, about six miles one-way to a trail where I could park my Jeep, over some pretty rugged terrain. Way more work than stalking and killing it.While women tend to put more time and energy into gathering than men do hunting (and also provide more energy/protein too), the task of gathering is far from drudgery and is usually a community activity.
If that was your method of getting clean for most of your life, odds are you'd wind up looking dirty a lot.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:I've washed up using snow.
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