“…Results from faunal profiles (e.g., Stiner, 2006;Stiner et al, 2000), nitrogen and carbon isotope analyses (e.g., Bocherens, 2009;Richards and Trinkaus, 2009), and energy requirement estimations (e.g., Froehle and Churchill, 2009), together with a lack of complex technology (e.g., Shea, 2006), have suggested that Neanderthals ate almost exclusively large animal game, with very little contribution from plants, small game or aquatic foods. In a behavioral ecology context, this narrow diet is a reflection of an environment where encounter rates with highlyranked prey are high, human population sizes are low, and the pressure to create new, complex social structures, such as a sexual division of labor, and complex technology to increase the capture and processing of foods, such as atlatls and dedicated plant grinding implements, is low (Bright et al, 2002;Kuhn and Stiner, 2006;O'Connell, 2006).…”