Thanks Badger... you know what I mean.
One of the areas that I especially enjoy sharing with my students is that of the Paleo through Neolithic ages (go figure
). Anyway, in that course of study, we examine the possibilities of Neanderthals and the Cro-Magnons. Because we lack much more than we have, we make much of our history on logical speculation based on a handful of bones and artifacts. One of my favorite pieces of study is a Discovery channel film entitled
Neanderthal. One of my favorite scenes is one in where the early humans as well as the Neanderthals make jewelry. Both of these groups are certainly in the harshest of conditions and certainly on the fringes of life and death daily. Yet, the need to create and decorate, to become more comfortable with the world around us, is evident throughout history.
Now fast forward 100,000... the great nations of the west, and certainly the Eastern Woodlands had much more time and resources on their hands than Cro Magnon would ever dream of. Just because the Ojibwa and kin were hunter/gatherer mixed with small scale agriculture didn't make them so primitive that even their basic hunting bow couldn't be embellished. I can buy many guesses, but the "only ceremonial bows or bows by mistake" idea is a hard one to sell me.
What I can buy is the notion that was actually proposed to me by Rich (again, go figure). He says the scallops make an "animal spine". Now, based on what we do know about animistic (nature worship) peoples, a form of worship or 'prayer' was to create art of what it was they wanted to acquire. For instance, the Lascaux cave paintings depict large game animals and successful hunts. While it is easy to think that this was a form of record keeping of a great hunt or sighting of game, it is more likely in the minds of ancient people that they are in fact calling to the spirits and praying for these things as their survival depended on it.
Finally, go back to our scalloped bow. If the Seneca or whatever groups made scalloped bows, they would do so because it
was the animal spine, the very thing they wanted to acquire in the hunt (or warfare if you consider it a human spine). That would be plenty of reason, knowing they certainly had the artistic/craft skills to make such weapons. These were primitive people by our standards, but they were not
so primitive...
Does that winded explanation help some of you to understand why the bows were scalloped? Some of you might want to ask further why then more natives bows weren't scalloped. That's like asking why all Christian denominations don't have a flame and cross on their church signs... because all are not United Methodist!
-Doug