So he and his colleagues decided to see how much of
a problem human hunters are in other parts of the world.
Not exact matches
For example, research on children's play in extant
hunter - gatherer societies, and evolutionary psychology studies of other mammalian young, have identified play as an adaptation that enabled early
humans to become powerful learners and
problem - solvers.
According to Jody Enck of Cornell's
Human Dimensions Research Unit, «By the middle of the 21st century, there may be no more
hunters unless those concerned about hunting can initiate an aggressive and well - funded effort to address
problems.»
Most
hunter - gatherers keeled over and died before they even hit their forties, they didn't have the ability to choose what they ate they simply ate whatever they could find and sometimes this led to health complications, mummified corpses of
humans from this period actually show that they did have a ton of health
problems, and how could they not?
Writing in the chapter «Social and communication behaviour of companion dogs» in The Domestic Dog: Its Evolution, Behaviour, and Interactions With People edited by James Serpell, John W.S. Bradshaw and Helen M.R. Nott wrote: «It is possible that
humans have selected dogs to bark more readily in order to draw attention to potential hazards or
problems («watchdog barking») and also during the pursuit of prey, directing the
hunter towards the kill.