For most outdoor enthusiasts, hunting is a legacy than has spanned generations, handed down from parents to children for longer than anyone can remember.
And according to one scientist, it has been going on for a lot longer than originally thought.
Henry Bunn, a professor of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, in his study from fossil evidence collected at an ancient butchery site in eastern Africa, has surmised that early man had the ability to ambush and attack large herds of animals and did it 1.6 million years earlier than previously thought, according to Great Britain’s The Observer newspaper.
And the...