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When did "we" start wearing clothes?
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- Lemon Slice
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When did "we" start wearing clothes?
https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/pal ... g-origins/
An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
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- Lemon Half
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
NomoneyNohoney wrote:https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/paleolithic-clothing-origins/
An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
I think I may have been about two years old when I started wearing clothes


AiY(D)
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
NomoneyNohoney wrote:https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/paleolithic-clothing-origins/
An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
An interesting concept, but science or speculation?
We don't have to travel back to the paleolithic to find human cultures where "clothing" was not used to protect from the elements.
Tierra del Fuego or "land of fire" is so named because of all the small fires seen by passing sailing ships. Why? Well you see the people there didn't keep warm by wearing clothes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahgan_people
Despite the cold climate, the early Yahgan wore little to no clothing, which only changed after extended contact with Europeans.
Apparently they even had fires in their boats to keep warm.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
AsleepInYorkshire wrote:NomoneyNohoney wrote:https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/paleolithic-clothing-origins/
An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
I think I may have been about two years old when I started wearing clothes. As Mum wanted a girl ...
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AiY(D)
We were so poor when I was growing up that my parents couldn't afford to clothe me until I was 6.
Then they bought me a hat so I could look out of the window.
Paul
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
Urbandreamer wrote:Despite the cold climate, the early Yahgan wore little to no clothing, which only changed after extended contact with Europeans.
Apparently they even had fires in their boats to keep warm.
I believe that "The Geordie" are direct descendants. Obviously.. wearing little to no clothing and hence the importance of the song " when the boat comes in"...they were clearly worried about the dangers of fires on board a wooden boat!

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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
Urbandreamer wrote:NomoneyNohoney wrote:https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/paleolithic-clothing-origins/
An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
An interesting concept, but science or speculation?
We don't have to travel back to the paleolithic to find human cultures where "clothing" was not used to protect from the elements.
Tierra del Fuego or "land of fire" is so named because of all the small fires seen by passing sailing ships. Why? Well you see the people there didn't keep warm by wearing clothes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahgan_peopleDespite the cold climate, the early Yahgan wore little to no clothing, which only changed after extended contact with Europeans.
Apparently they even had fires in their boats to keep warm.
Despite the cold climate, the early Yahgan wore little to no clothing, which only changed after extended contact with Europeans.
I'm sure they must have seen other mammals and birds running around. Unless they were vegetarian, they surely hunted animals, but wouldn't have eaten the skin. I guess they had knives. The fact that nobody put two and two together is rather worrying.

Steve
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
Ses recherches ont-elles permis de démontrer le type de vêtements (sarouel homme, pull,...) fut inventé en premier dans les zones froides de la planète ?
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- Lemon Half
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
rs631 wrote:An archaeologist uses climate data and tailoring tools to trace the invention and evolution of apparel in the world's colder climates.
Ses recherches ont-elles permis de démontrer le type de vêtements (sarouel homme, pull,...) fut inventé en premier dans
les zones froides de la planète ?
I believe that woolly mammoths wore furry trousers, although it might be stretching a point to say that they were the inventors.
V8
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- The full Lemon
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
When I was in Northern Australia I was told by an aborigine that they take off their clothes when it rains, and put them somewhere dry. Once it stops raining they can quickly dry off their skin and then put their clothes back on.
Probably helps that they have a warm climate
Probably helps that they have a warm climate
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
Lootman wrote:When I was in Northern Australia I was told by an aborigine that they take off their clothes when it rains, and put them somewhere dry. Once it stops raining they can quickly dry off their skin and then put their clothes back on.
Probably helps that they have a warm climate
Not much use in west-central Scotland. And I'd probably get arrested! And taken to hospital for hypothermia.
--kiloran
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Re: When did "we" start wearing clothes?
DrFfybes wrote:We were so poor when I was growing up that my parents couldn't afford to clothe me until I was 6.
Then they bought me a hat so I could look out of the window.
Little known fact: before WW1, boys from poor backgrounds in rural areas would routinely wear their sisters' cast off dresses and pinafores - even to school, and it was not thought unusual or a target for name-calling.
(Whether Lark Rise's Flora Thompson ever described this, I don't know, but I would be surprised if it wasn't common in rural Oxfordshire where she lived)
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