Hm I'm not enough of a human bone specialist to answer this from scientific perspective I know there's ancient historians debating feasibility of spectacular athletic feats beyond what we can do today. Maybe check authors like Stephen Miller, Paul Christenson and/or Donald Kyle
I'm trying to respond to a bunch of different points; hard to be clear w/ twitter. @NeolithicSheep is talking about basic farming tasks and suggesting they demand a high level of athleticism.
I am point out that we know these were done by people in bad nutritional health.
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Sure but I'm saying that yes, that might be more true on a Roman villa, but less so in the classical Greek chora
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Fair enough. But if the Roman villa is not relevant to our discussion of hoplites, neither is neolithic yoking techniques. Neither has any probative bearing, which was my point - the apparently demanding physical task can be done by malnourished people, which means it cannot...
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Not a high level of athleticism, I am no triathlete and eg Myke can prob dead lift me. On the other hand, I know that I'm stronger than your average modern office worker and had better cardio endurance even before I got bored during the pandemic and took up jogging.
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Were farmers using past tech universally well nourished? Demonstrably not. They prob also weren't hoplites. But on average I suspect you're underrating their physical abilities through unfamiliarity with what their routine tasks entailed.
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