- Regresar a la página principal »
- Did early humans eat pandas?
Posted by : Unknown
15 oct 2012
Fossil records from China suggest that the famously adorable bamboo munchers were often slashed to death by primitive people
Many animal lovers have a soft spot for pandas. After all, they're cute, cuddly, and often captivating.
But our relationship with the bamboo-nibbling bears wasn't always so
affectionate. According to one Chinese scientist, ancient remains of the
animals suggest that prehistoric man used to brutally hunt pandas — and
then eat them. Here's what you should know:
What proof does this scientist have?Wei Gunabiao, head of the Institute of Three Gorges Paleoanthropology at a Chongqing museum, says fossil records
show evidence of human-inflicted wounds on ancient pandas. "We have
studied many samples of panda fossils excavated in Chongqing from the
sites where humans once lived," says Wei. "A large number of them showed that pandas were slashed to death by man."
But how does Wei know that people ate pandas?
"In primitive times, people wouldn't kill animals that were useless to them," Wei tells the Chongqing Morning Post. Fossils show that the animals were often cut up, and because our ancestors wouldn't kill an animal just for killing's sake, we can logically deduce that early man consumed panda meat.
"In primitive times, people wouldn't kill animals that were useless to them," Wei tells the Chongqing Morning Post. Fossils show that the animals were often cut up, and because our ancestors wouldn't kill an animal just for killing's sake, we can logically deduce that early man consumed panda meat.
Why pandas?
"As weird and stringy as panda meat sounds, those cute black and white critters of prehistoric times were not quite the same as the gentle, giant bears we know today," says Jessica Rawden at CinemaBlend. Just 10,000 years ago in Chongqing's high mountains, the animals were smaller — about "the size of Tibetan mastiffs," says Wei — and much more abundant. In other words, they were a far cry from the slightly goofy endangered creatures observed carefully in zoos today. It's likely that "prehistoric men and women quite enjoyed them," says Rawden. "I just wonder if they were a delicacy, or an everyday sort of meal."
"As weird and stringy as panda meat sounds, those cute black and white critters of prehistoric times were not quite the same as the gentle, giant bears we know today," says Jessica Rawden at CinemaBlend. Just 10,000 years ago in Chongqing's high mountains, the animals were smaller — about "the size of Tibetan mastiffs," says Wei — and much more abundant. In other words, they were a far cry from the slightly goofy endangered creatures observed carefully in zoos today. It's likely that "prehistoric men and women quite enjoyed them," says Rawden. "I just wonder if they were a delicacy, or an everyday sort of meal."