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by londons_explore 846 days ago
> Many people seem to think there will be mass die offs

Humans have already caused many mass die offs. Go into a forest today and try to catch dinner with your bare hands and you'll find it is near impossible. Yet it used to be possible - that's how our ancestors lived.

Us inventing aids like the bow and arrow has depleted the wild animal population enough that we now couldn't survive without such aids.

3 comments

But survive and thrive we do. And if you go to many places in North America (or around the world) you can still see large populations of wild animals, many recovering substantially with improved protection policies.
Growing up in a rural area, I used to catch dinner with a sling as a kid. Fat pigeons were my target. This is still possible today. :)
Historically you could go and catch a pig or similar reliably and feed your family since they were everywhere. Today it is hard to even feed yourself, you need many pigeons to feed even one person for a day.

Did you know that just a couple of thousand of years ago there were more elephants than humans in sub Saharan Africa? Feeding yourself with hunting then is really easy, there are meat giants to eat everywhere, that is what earth was like when humans were still hunters. Then humans hunted most of the largest animals to extinction and the remaining got turned to cattle.

If you want easy access to wild pigs just move to Texas lol, they have a real problem with them
"Did you know that just a couple of thousand of years ago there were more elephants than humans in sub Saharan Africa? "

This does not appear surprising. Elephants were perfectly adapted to that environment and able to fend off dangerous predators. Humans - several thousand years ago - were not as dangerous. And thus used to be the prey of necessity for older, limping lions in the past. The old big cats could no longer catch a fleeting gazelle but the slow, clumsy humans made an acceptable substitute - even if the meat tasted like bad pig. Even in the last millennium, thousands of humans were devoured by man-eating cats.

> but the slow, clumsy humans made an acceptable substitute

The humans that made thorn bush corrals and teamed up with spears when one yelled lion?

They're not as easy for big cats as many might think, even today you can see barefoot humans with spears facing down cats and cats shying away from the sound of humans.

Only old slightly mad cats gave humans a go, and they rarely lasted long until people teamed up and took out the man eaters.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJZR68KSIgY

> Even in the last millennium, thousands of humans were devoured by man-eating cats.

That's, like, one or two a year ... comparable to drowning and other accidental fatalities.

In reality, outside the drama of Rudyard Kipling story, it's a rare bit of drama for big game hunters to have an actual man eater to go after.

My bad - a correction on my side: it was more like tens of thousands of humans killed by man-eating big cats. Thousands of humans were killed every few years in the last millennium - it was not a small number by any means.

Big cats don't face groups - they are ambush predators. Some man-eaters have murder counts reaching several hundred just by their lone selves. Even late as the early 1900's, a tigress in India stalked and killed 436 people. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiger_attack#The_Champawat_Tig...

If they hunted them to extinction then how was it easy pickings?
I highly doubt bow and arrows have to do with this depletion, Australian Aboriginals were highly highly effective hunters with spears woomeras and boomerangs and there was an abundance of wild life around in their presence.
But there weren't a billion of them around.

FWIW, quoting https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_longbow : "The trade of yew wood to England for longbows was such that it depleted the stocks of yew over a huge area."

Australian Aboriginals didn't have bows so not sure how that proves anything.
They could've killed a lot of shit with similarly effective weaponry, if they wanted too, their culture wasn't into that.

My proof is that they're the oldest surviving civilization on earth and lived mostly a hunter gatherer lifestyle without running out of food and requiring mass scale agriculture to survive.