The Global “Impact” of Projectile Technologies: Updating Methods and Regional Overviews of the Invention and Transmission of the Spear-Thrower and the Bow and Arrow

Part of: Society for American Archaeology 89th Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA (2024)

This collection contains the abstracts of the papers presented in the session entitled "The Global “Impact” of Projectile Technologies: Updating Methods and Regional Overviews of the Invention and Transmission of the Spear-Thrower and the Bow and Arrow" at the 89th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.

Only hominids can effectively propel objects through space—projectile weapons have helped us occupy nearly every ecosystem on the planet. The most radical refinement to this armament was the bow and arrow, which is exclusive to Homo sapiens. Tracking these technologies in the past is a key challenge in global archaeology. This worldwide session encourages large-scale comparative perspectives. We invite papers that discuss methods, comparative baselines, and metric thresholds for more reliably identifying weapon systems based on projectile point measurements, regional overviews on the initial invention and cultural transmission of projectile technologies, relationships with other coincident changes (for example, demographic and economic shifts such as domestic plants and animals), and the impact of projectile technologies on conflict and war. In most regions, bows replaced spear-throwers, while in some regions they coexisted. Refined chronologies are key pieces to this puzzle, which allow us to better track independent inventions, the pace of cultural transmission, and whether other changes came before or after the initial appearance of new weapon systems.

Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-15 of 15)

  • Documents (15)

Documents
  1. Atlatl Dating and Violence in Rock Art in the American Southwest (2024)
  2. The Bow That Wasn't: On the Absence of the Bow in Aboriginal Australia (2024)
  3. Dart Points and Chusquea Shafts in the Argentine South Puna (2024)
  4. The Decline of Darts in Late Formative Taraco (Southern Lake Titicaca) and Its Implications for the Rise of Tiwanaku Hegemony (2024)
  5. Did Archery Technology Precipitate Complexity in the Titicaca Basin? A Metric Analysis of Projectile Points, 11–1 ka (2024)
  6. Environment versus Technology: Weighing the Drivers of Western North American Holocene Intensification (2024)
  7. Exploring 10,000 Years of Variation in Weapon Technologies: A Diachronic Analysis of Lithic Projectile Points in the Puna de Atacama (Northern Chile) (2024)
  8. Exploring Potential Connections between Pleistocene Bifacial Projectile Designs in Japan and North America: A First View (2024)
  9. Extended Temporal Overlaps of Atlatl and Bow Technologies in the Great Basin and Other Parts of North America (2024)
  10. Functional Perspective on the Evolution of Hunting Technology in Africa and Europe (2024)
  11. Further Considerations of Tip Cross-Sectional Area for Determining Projectile Systems (2024)
  12. Small Stemmed Projectile Points, Bow and Arrow, and the Presence of New Human Populations in the Final Late Holocene of South Patagonia (2024)
  13. Spear-Thrower or Bow? Refining Comparative Metrics to Track the Cultural Transmission of Bow Technology in the Andes (2024)
  14. A Study of the Free-Backing Bow-and-Arrow System’s Functions and Social Implications in Western Alaska (AD 600–Nineteenth Century) by the Use of a Morphometrical and Mechanical Methodology (2024)
  15. Temporal Persistence of Spear-Thrower Use in Uruguay: Evidence from the Late Pleistocene and Late Holocene (2024)