Move over, men: Women were hunters, too

An undated photo provided by Randall Haas shows excavation work at the Wilamaya Patjxa archaeological site in Peru, where the nearly 10,000-year-old remains of a female hunter were found in 2018. Anthropologists are finding that women in modern foraging societies have played a major role in catching game. [Randall Haas via The New York Times]

It's often viewed as a given: Men hunted, women gathered. After all, the anthropological reasoning went, men were naturally more aggressive, whereas the slower pace of gathering was ideal for women, who were mainly focused on caretaking.

"It's not something I questioned," said Sophia Chilczuk, a recent graduate of Seattle Pacific University, where she studied applied human biology. "And I think the majority of the public has that assumption."

At times, the notion has proved stronger than the evidence at hand. In 1963, archaeologists in Colorado unearthed the nearly 10,000-year-old remains of a woman who had been buried with a projectile point. They concluded that the tool had been used not for killing game but, unconventionally, as a scraping knife.

But the male-centric narrative has been slowly changing. On the first day of a college anthropology course,...

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