Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct

   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #1  

bcp

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Rabbits are small, fast, and devilishly hard to catch. And that could have had dire consequences for Neanderthals.

A new study suggests that an inability to shift from hunting large mammals to wild rabbits and other small game may have contributed to the downfall of European Neanderthals during the Middle Paleolithic period, about 30,000 years ago.
...

"We show in our study that [modern humans] used rabbits extensively, but Neanderthals didn't."



Failure to Hunt Rabbits Part of Neanderthals' Demise?
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #2  
Rabbits are small, fast, and devilishly hard to catch. And that could have had dire consequences for Neanderthals.

A new study suggests that an inability to shift from hunting large mammals to wild rabbits and other small game may have contributed to the downfall of European Neanderthals during the Middle Paleolithic period, about 30,000 years ago.
...

"We show in our study that [modern humans] used rabbits extensively, but Neanderthals didn't."



Failure to Hunt Rabbits Part of Neanderthals' Demise?

Interesting read. Thanks for posting. Neanderthal had evolved in a manner that allowed him to exist in a very cold, inhospitable climate and physically capable of killing very large game. He was extremely robust and very, very strong. His large body size was not only more efficient in cold climate, but his tremedous strength enabled him to handle the large game. Phyical Anthropologists, studying the remains of Neanderthals, have noted a multitude of injuries suffered by them that strongly resemble...get this...injuries suffered by modern day rodeo performers...which to me indicates not that they competed in bull riding, but that they got very physical with their meals. The bottom line is that they were physically adapted to the cold climate and the hunting of large game. The question is, were they too specialized to change their hunting habits?
Scientists are beginning to give them more credit for intelligence and in all probability they had a fully functional language. Geneticists are now saying that modern humans have a certain percentage of genes that were evolved in the Neanderthal...a clue that they interbred with Cro Magnon and in all probability were simply bred out of existence. When different cultures meet, they may or may not fight, but they will always interbreed...and more importantly, there will be a cultural exchange...so if their survival depended on hunting rabbits, it's likely they could have learned from the Cro Magnon.
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #4  
What are you trying to say about tractor owners?
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #6  
Rabbits are small, fast, and devilishly hard to catch. And that could have had dire consequences for Neanderthals.

A new study suggests that an inability to shift from hunting large mammals to wild rabbits and other small game may have contributed to the downfall of European Neanderthals during the Middle Paleolithic period, about 30,000 years ago.
...

"We show in our study that [modern humans] used rabbits extensively, but Neanderthals didn't."



Failure to Hunt Rabbits Part of Neanderthals' Demise?

Well, DUH! :duh: :laughing::laughing::laughing: It took a study to figure this out? REALLY?

Do these people watch Bugs Bunny? :confused3: I still watch Bugs and everyone SHOULD know that Elmer was a Neanderthal, a short Neanderthal but a Neanderthal never the less, and he never is able to get Bugs! Even with Elmer was singing "Kill the Rabbit! Kill the Rabbit!" Bugs always gets away! The episode I watched the other day had Bugs, Daffy and Elmer going hunting. Daffy gets shot. Elmer gets shot. Bugs DOES NOT get shot! Yet another failure of out Education System. :rolleyes::laughing::laughing::laughing:

Later,
Dan
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #7  
I wonder why the Neanderthals didn't eat the colored eggs the rabbits produce at Easter? :confused3:
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #8  
Neanderthals are far from extinct, nowadays they roam supermarkets, hunting in the frozen food aisle.
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #9  
Neanderthals are far from extinct, nowadays they roam supermarkets, hunting in the frozen food aisle.

Saw one at Walmart just yesterday......he was biting into a frozen burrito!:laughing:
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #12  
Roast your rabbit, wrapped in bacon... much better... heck everything is better wrapped in bacon!

James K0UA
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #13  
:licking: Yes it is. Ever tried bacon-wrapped bacon? It's even better than you're imagining. :laughing:
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #14  
As a youngster, I grew up eating every cottontail, swamp rabbit, and jackrabbit we could find and kill. I had never eaten domestic rabbit until I started raising New Zealand Whites in the Fall of 1995. In about 5 years, I raised over 300 and ate lots of rabbit. As good as it is, I still don't understand why we rarely find rabbit in our grocery stores.

Of course, I'll never forget the one time I did find rabbit in the supermarket in a Chicago suburb. Three pounds; one cut up rabbit, imported from Poland! As many rabbits as there are in this country, I couldn't believe they had imported rabbit meat. But I was glad enough to see it that I didn't hesitate to buy a box. When it was thawed, it looked good, smelled OK, etc. and when my wife fried it and I took one bite and we threw it all in the garbage. It tasted as if it had been fried in grease left over from a long ago fish fry.
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #15  
bcp, in a worst case scenario...uhmmmm, oh say something far fetched like the Gubberment collapsing due to over extended financial problems{cough} and the grid goes down permanently. How long do you reckon large game in this country would survive with 350 million hungry "Neanderthals"? Heck we almost hunted deer to extinction in the mid to late 1800's, so I say 3-4 months. After that it's all small game if your want to be a meat eater.

I chuckle when I read guy's bragging that their go to "survival" rifle(not defense rifle) is some big game caliber. Those guys are gonna be mighty hungry. The mighty .22lr & better yet snare's will feed those that figure out how to hunt.
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #16  
If you can get any 22lr ammo, per that other thread.
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #17  
No doubt about it, the .22Lr is the "go to"gun if you want to feed yourself. That is if we can ever get some **** ammo!

James K0UA
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #18  
:licking: Yes it is. Ever tried bacon-wrapped bacon? It's even better than you're imagining. :laughing:

My cardiologist gave me this same recipe......he said add cheese and salt to it! :thumbsup:
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #19  
It's funny what they'll do when the next boat payment is due, huh? :laughing:
 
   / Eat more rabbits--don't become extinct #20  
If you can get any 22lr ammo, per that other thread.

Let's just say I have been striving for preparedness for the last couple of years. In some areas I am comfortable, in others I have a long way to go. I will say this, the scope of being really prepared is overwhelming at times. The more you think about it, the thing just snowballs and grows more and more.
 

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