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Ready to throw |
The Incredible Atlatl
Imagine a time when
mega fauna roamed the Earth: mastodons, mammoths, aurochs, and
megaceros. At least 20,000 years ago, our ancestors created a weapon
that allowed them to bring food home to their families. The
spear-thrower entered the scene, surviving in many parts of the world
until a few hundred years ago. This simple device uses complex physics
to add power to a hand thrown projectile. The common name "atlatl" comes
from the Aztec word for spear thrower, but the atlatl existed in
Australia (under the name "woomera"), in Asia and Europe starting in the
Upper Paleolithic, and in the Americas, from the Arctic south to the
deserts of the Southwest.
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Throwing the dart |
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Lift off! |
Many times when I teach the atlatl to students, they say
it is their favorite primitive hunting weapon. There is something
profoundly elegant in its simplicity, but in range it matches a bow and
arrow. I can throw a spear approximately 30 paces by hand, yesterday I
threw a spear 102 paces with the atlatl!
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Aiming |
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Throwing |
Yesterday half of the Friday Homeschool Group and I spent an hour
throwing darts with the atlatl. It is easy to imagine our cardboard
targets as mammoths and giant ground sloths, but I find that the atlatl
develops an internal skills as well, centering on focus, balance and
precision. We threw for accuracy and distance, but with every throw an
understanding and application of the correct form must be achieved,
otherwise the dart falls at one's feet. Watching it soar through the
air, or slam into a cardboard target with a resounding impact, adds
excitement and enthusiasm to the practice, while simultaneously creating
an inner fortitude, and respect for our ancestor's skills with this
ancient weapon.
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High flyer |
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Dart sailing towards target |
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See the flex in the dart |
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Watch out mammoths! |
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Team Throwing |
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Baton grip |
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Split finger grip |
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The spurs |
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A variety of atlatls. Top to bottom: expedient made from chokecherry, scrap from a hickory bow, osage orange, hickory, black walnut (from a broken bow), Gambel's Oak from atlatl master Ken Wee. |