Today I learned about 'rabbit starvation' and how Neanderthals avoided it.

When you're a hunter-gatherer and it's winter, you may try to survive by eating only meat - like rabbits, but also deer and other game. But this gives you too much protein and not enough carbohydrates and fat: most of this meat is very lean. If you eat enough lean meat to get all the calories you need, you can die from an overdose of protein! It's called 'protein toxicity'.

Hunter-gatherers in this situation sometimes throw away the 'steaks' and 'roasts' - the thighs and shoulders of the animals they kill - or feed them to their dogs. They need FAT to survive! So they focus on eating the fatty parts, including bone marrow.

So, in some cultures, while the men are out hunting, the women spend time making bone grease. This takes a lot of work. They take bones and break them into small pieces with a stone hammer. They boil them for several hours. The fat floats to the top. Then they let the water cool and skim off the fat.

There's been evidence for people doing this as far back as 28,000 BC. But now some scientists have found a Neanderthal 'bone grease factory' that's 125,000 years old!

This was during the last interglacial, in Germany. In a site near a lake, called Neumark-Nord, Neanderthals killed a lot of bison, horses and deer and crushed their bones, leaving behind tens of thousands of small bone fragments.

• Lutz Kindler et al, Large-scale processing of within-bone nutrients by Neanderthals, 125,000 years ago, https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adv1257

Thanks to @sarahtaber for spotting this!

Now I better understand how humans domesticated wolves. In winter we weren't just giving them scraps. We were giving them steaks and roasts.

@johncarlosbaez

The open question is, did humans do all the work, or how much did wolfs self-domesticate under evolutionary pressure of snack dispensaries.

"the prevailing domestication hypotheses posit that humans selectively bred wolves that were more docile. However, a competing hypothesis states that wolves that were less hostile towards humans would essentially domesticate themselves by naturally selecting for tamer wolves since that would allow for easier access to food from human settlements."

Rapid evolution of prehistoric dogs from wolves by natural and sexual selection emerges from an agent-based model
12 February 2025 https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2024.2646

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-domestication

@maxpool - I've heard claims that wolves accepted humans into their packs because we had useful skills, and they could help us hunt... so that to some extent *they* domesticated *us*.

Now of course we have the complete upper hand in the power dynamic, but it may not have been always thus.

it's interesting to think about, at least.

@johncarlosbaez
Well MY dog is pretty much the boss of me, John Carlos, so this whole domestication thing probably worked in both directions, in my opinion.

@Guillotine_Jones @johncarlosbaez

DAE Border Collie? They will run your life if you let them.