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Early men and women were equal, study claims

Sexual equality is the norm and women only lost out with emergence of agriculture, study claims

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Early men and women were equal, study claims

A study has shown that in contemporary hunter-gatherer tribes, men and women tend to have equal influence on where their groups lives and who they live with.

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The findings challenge the idea that sexual equality is a recent invention, suggesting that it has been the norm for humans for most of our evolutionary history.

Mark Dyble, an anthropologist who led the study at University College London, said: "There is still this wider perception that hunter-gatherers are more macho or male-dominated. We'd argue it was only with the emergence of agriculture, when people could start to accumulate resources, that inequality emerged."

Dyble says the findings suggest that equality may have been a survival advantage and played an important role in shaping human society and evolution as it would have fostered wider-ranging social networks and closer cooperation between unrelated individuals.

"Sexual equality is one of an important suite of changes to social organisation, including things like pair-bonding, our big, social brains, and language, that distinguishes humans," he said. "It's an important one that hasn't really been highlighted before.

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"It gives you a far more expansive social network with a wider choice of mates, so inbreeding would be less of an issue. And you come into contact with more people and you can share innovations, which is something that humans do par excellence."

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