The American Promise: Printed Page 9
The American Promise, Value Edition: Printed Page 7
The American Promise: A Concise History: Printed Page 9
The American Promise: Printed Page 9
The American Promise, Value Edition: Printed Page 7
The American Promise: A Concise History: Printed Page 9
Page 9After the extinction of large game animals, some hunters began to concentrate on bison in the huge herds that grazed the plains stretching hundreds of miles east of the Rocky Mountains. For almost a thousand years after the big-
The American Promise: Printed Page 9
The American Promise, Value Edition: Printed Page 7
The American Promise: A Concise History: Printed Page 9
Page 10Like their nomadic predecessors, Folsom hunters moved constantly to maintain contact with their prey. Great Plains hunters often stampeded bison herds over cliffs and then slaughtered the animals that plunged to their deaths. At the Folsom site McJunkin discovered, hunters drove bison into a narrow gulch and then speared twenty-
Bows and arrows reached Great Plains hunters from the north about AD 500. They largely replaced spears, which had been the hunters’ weapons of choice for millennia. Bows permitted hunters to wound animals from farther away, arrows made it possible to shoot repeatedly, and arrowheads were easier to make and therefore less costly to lose than the larger, heavier spear points. These new weapons did not otherwise alter age-