Throwing stick
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The throwing stick is one of the first weapons used by early humans and cultures all around the world. In essence, it is a short stave or wooden club thrown as a projectile to hunt small game such as rabbits or waterfowl. In flight, it rotates rapidly cracking the target with one of the ends and either maiming or killing it. The difference between a throwing stick and a javelin is found in their shapes and lengths. A javelin is almost always a straight shaft with either a pointed tip or a spearhead attached to the front end. A throwing stick can be straight like a pointed wooden shaft or curved like the boomerang. Furthermore the throwing stick is a much shorter pole weapon then the javelin.
Distribution
The throwing stick is a simple tool used in hunting small game and waterfowl. In particular, the Egyptians used throwing sticks to hunt ducks as seen in several wall paintings. Tutankhamun was a known lover of duck hunting and used the throwing stick in his numerous hunts. The Aborigines of Australia used the boomerang. Although returning boomerangs are found in many cultures and will return to the user if thrown properly, the choice weapon of most cultures was the heavy non-returning boomerang that could also be wielded as a club or knife for attacking close by kangaroo, wallaby, and emu by using it as a stabbing weapon. The Native American tribes such as the Hopi also utilized the throwing stick to hunt rabbits.
Other titles for the throwing stick are: rabbit stick, throwing club, killer stick, baton, boomerang, and kylie. The throwing stick can also be used as a weapon to be utilized in human combat, though the heavy non-return boomerang was the only one truly effective in this use.
Survival tool
As a survival tool, the throwing stick is one of the most effective and easiest tools to obtain. Other than a weapon, it can also be used as a digging tool for making fire-pits and underground shelter. A curved limb will suffice as a throwing stick. Ancient throwing sticks were believed to be made of hardwood with a weighted or curve on one side to impart momentum so the stick stays straight and does not wobble in mid-flight. To see an example of the throwing stick in action, go to the discovery channel website and look up Man vs. Wild.
Variations
All throwing sticks and its variations are about 2 to 3 feet long pieces of thick hardwood, usually about the circumference of the user's wrist. When they are thrown, they spin, creating the image of a sort of blurry disc.
Pommel Point Throwing Sticks are not actual variations of the throwing stick. They are simply throwing sticks with slightly blunt points that can crush skulls if they travel at a fast enough velocity. Thus, it is also dubbed the skull crusher throwing stick.
In the southwest, (southwest of which country/area/continent???) some throwing sticks have been found to have a propeller twist to them.
Return boomerangs have a flat convex surface that must be thrown at a 45 degree angle with a sharp flick of the wrist. The Egyptians described it as "-returning to the feet of the thrower and be ready at hand for the next flight of ducks."
The heavy Knife Boomerang could be made into a close-range hunting tool by plunging its sharp edge into the underbelly of emu, kangaroo, and wallaby.