Thanks for the heads up on the french article, Craig. There was enough of english in the article, along with a good photo, to definitly get my attention. The english translated description (what their was) along with the photo definitly supports the theory that the "Mannheim bow" could be a true bow. It looks like a survival bow, or some of the bows I made in my youth. The wood used for both this and the Stellmoor bow (pine) would be common (if not dominant) during the latter period of the ice age. And as the ice retreated people followed the ice, taking their "proto bows" with them. Eventually, after many sucesses and failures, the "Stellmoor bow" could have come into being. I don't think that the Stellmoor bow was the first bow ever made by man. It appears, at least in the reproductions I've seen, too "finished" to be a "proto-bow". So, could the "Mannheim bow" be an example of one of the earliest bows? Maybe.