The moment Lars Anderson is mentioned, an explosion of emotions is the typical response in the archery community.
I get it, he made many historical claims without backing them up,
and most of his stunts running around and doing flips is for stunt.
The thing is, his fundamental technique of shooting a burst of arrows is real and the fastest known technique today.
Here is a video tutorial
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFkjVA7BIcM on how to speed shoot like lars and you can see the technique itself does not require special arrows, but two fletch and a wider nock does help
What i am wondering is, could stone age hunters used this technique as
follow-up shots after their first accurate arrow is shot?
we also made a video following ancient artwork following their techniques
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pV7nDusS9Twstone age archery represents at least 90% of archery history and it is unrecorded history. Only have a few cave paintings where we see archers holding arrows in their bow hand, but not string hand
i can see this being useful for self defence against predators, and followup shots for shooting at a group of animals, where accuracy is not important