Re: Terra firma hominids




Mario Petrinovich wrote:
nickname:
When I collected
oysters off rocks in Japan, I ate them while in the water, and left the
shells there. I've also eaten bull kelp on the beach, bringing no
evidence home with me. Same with coconuts, eat'em & leave'm. Do you
think He did things differently?

Definitely did differently. If you leave shells in sea, next time
you come you will not know which one you've already eaten.

Mario, I was eating oysters attached to stones, when I popped off the
top shell with a stick-tool blade, it fell down in the sand. If I came
back again there, I'd know that oyster top shell in the sand is not
edible, since oysters grow on rocks, not sand. I would ignore the
oyster top shell in the sand, and the oyster bottom shell on the rock
is already opened, since I can see the shiny interior, so I would
ignore it also. This is true for many seafoods that are not bilateral
symmetrical (same shell on both sides). With bilateral clams, after
opening them, dropping them in the water makes them sink with the
interior side upwards. Since the sunlight reflects off the shiny
interior, it can be ignored when looking for fresh shellfish.

You will
definitely put eaten shells on land, and leave it there. Probably you will
hit it around your camp. Why? Well, I was a soldier in a real war. Despite
of the technology of today, soldiers still use the same old technic for
safety. They drop bottles and cans around their camps. Human ear is extremly
sensitive to those sounds. If anybody step on it, you will hear it, no
problemo.
Now, imagine a rocky coast. With all those shells scatered around
your camp. You are safe. You will hear if any animal step on some shell.
-- Mario

Interesting, Mario. Thanks. DD

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: opening oysters with stone tools?
    ... >> well it would depend on the stone but flint, obsidian, chert, anything ... >> which will flake to render a sharp enough edge to cut and use as a wedge ... I suppose the natural act would be to bash the shell ... where they must have eaten oysters etc. ...
    (sci.anthropology.paleo)
  • Re: Julian Jaynes on Consciousness
    ... >>So oysters is what I got back to. ... who ever heard of Turtle on the Half shell?? ... > properly moistened with the proper perfusion solution. ...
    (talk.origins)
  • Re: Terra firma hominids
    ... Mario, I was eating oysters attached to stones, when I popped off the ... top shell with a stick-tool blade, it fell down in the sand. ... edible, since oysters grow on rocks, not sand. ...
    (sci.anthropology.paleo)
  • Re: Shrimp "count" and flavor...
    ... Mussels are even better than oysters. ... olive oil and sprinkle on a fennel, chili powder, thyme, pepper ... Remove the top shell, ...
    (rec.food.cooking)
  • Re: Julian Jaynes on Consciousness
    ... >>>I dreamed about oysters. ... Turtle on the half shell is a hell of lot easier to eat than turtle on ... used to be routine in labs -- the turtle heart preparation. ...
    (talk.origins)