The young Kuro - Magnon boy who lived in South East France 15,000 years ago was brought to masculinity by his family and began exchanging his valuable flint for the ivory spear journey.
Hundreds of different hunting techniques and techniques were developed by tribal people all over the world. These include professionally manufactured weapons such as spears, spears, bows, blow pipes, boomers, even simpler clubs and axes, slings, lasso, net, blanc. Many of these may be the result of generations of development and improvement. For example, a bow is a range from short and weak weapons made in just a day to a long bow made over time to provide considerable strength and accuracy. Flexible staves can not shoot force Like Kalahari, humans become very intimate by finding poisons and completing tracking and tracking methods.
As mentioned above, Aztec warriors used various weapons in battle scenes from slings, bows, arrows to spears and clubs. However, some Aztec warriors' favorite Central American weapons are related to atlatl or javelin throws. Originally from coastal hunting weapons offered by its predecessor, atlatl is commonly used in various Central American cultures like Mixtecs, Zapotecs and Maya. According to expert Thomas J. Elpel - a flat throwing board is made of a stick about 2 feet in length with a handle on one end and a thorn on the other end. The pillar fits into a cavity behind a 4-6 foot dart (spear). Darts are suspended parallel to the board and held by the fingertips of the handle. It then fires through wide arms and wrist movements like tennis tea. A tweaked atlatl can be used to throw a throwing arrow from 120 to 150 yards with an accuracy of 30 to 40 yards.