Archaeological evidence shows that bone skates (skates made of animal bones) are the oldest human powered means of transport, dating back to 3000 BC. Why people started skating on ice and where is not as clear, since ancient remains were found in several locations spread across Central and North Europe.
In a recent paper, published in the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society of London, Dr Formenti and Professor Minetti show substantial evidence supporting the hypothesis that the birth of ice skating took place in Southern Finland, where the number of lakes within 100 square kilometres is the highest in the world.
“In Central and Northern Europe, five thousand years ago people struggled to survive the severe winter conditions and it seems unlikely that ice skating developed as a hobby” says Dr Formenti. “As happened later for skis and bicycles, I am convinced that we first made ice skates in order to limit the energy required for our daily journeys”.
Formenti and Minetti did their experiments on an ice rink by the Alps, where they measured the energy consumption of people skating on bones. Through mathematical models and computer simulations of 240 ten-kilometre journeys, their research study shows that in winter the use of bone skates would have limited the energy requirements of Finnish people by 10%. On the other hand, the advantage given by the use of skates in other North European countries would be only about 1%.
Subsequent studies performed by Formenti and Minetti have shown how fast and how far people could skate in past epochs, from 3000BC to date.
From http://www.wiley.com/wiley-blackwell
Comments
Thanks for sharing this, I
July 31, 2009 by Anonymous, 14 weeks 1 day ago
Comment id: 38903
Thanks for sharing this, I read about it before but nice with a recap. It took a while for skating to become a sport known as Figure Skating.
Skates are better for the hunt. What no bone Zamboni?
December 26, 2007 by James Scott (not verified), 1 year 45 weeks ago
Comment id: 26596
It would be a far better use of skates on a glassy frozen lake not for strategic movement (saving 10% energy) but to use the skates in the hunt to go after large animals of all kinds as they tried to cross the frozen lake patch which these creatures do from time-to-time in dead winter. If you’ve ever seen a moose or deer crossing a smooth, frozen lake, it’s an awkward sight.
I’m surprised they didn’t mention the advantage bone skates would give to the human hunter against an animal trying to cross the slick ice patch. The hunter could remain hidden along the shore until the animal was well out there in the middle of the slippery frozen lake and then skate out to attack it while the frightened animal slipped around. That would make more sense given that frozen lake conditions ideal for skating travel would be rare.
A hunter from 3000 BC could even devise a smooth ice trap in the middle of the lake and along a known animal crossing path on the snow covered lake.
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