Comment on How did living in caves not backfire on cavemen?
scarabic@lemmy.world 1 year agoAfrica’s climate doesn’t offer that much deadly cold.
And where caves were involved, they may not have been a constant dwelling but a place to retreat to in times of need.
Your spelunking friends don’t consider rain a deadly threat because they have REI jackets and access to antibiotics, so their attention is entirely on the issues of rain destabilizing the cave. But disease and exposure were immediate deadly threats to more primitive people.
So hiding in a cave during the rain, despite your spelunker friends’ modern safety standards, was probably a survival tactic.
shinigamiookamiryuu@lemm.ee 1 year ago
I mean, there were cave dwellers in Europe and Asia too. The richest cave culture finds were in France.
I can attest all threats are considered to the best of one’s ability (minus the “things everyone is willing to risk”), even with everyone’s REI vests/jackets, which is why everyone often takes different routes based on what they’re good at (for example, one is bad with slopes, the other panics at puddles, though they insist this is “fun”). Once a cave even had classic stereotypical radiation in it (I should note one unspoken con of caves is they have an extremely high radon composition, which is natural in caves even though hearing it might be a mind changer). Every cave is different.