Category Archives: Cave Lion

Illustrating the Past

I see myself more as a writer than an artist, so I’ve been pleasantly surprised by the interest in the illustrations in my books.

My journey began in childhood. I was eager to share the stories swirling in my head, but I didn’t know how to spell many words. This made things tricky for a budding author. To solve this, I told my stories through pictures and short captions.

As I grew, my writing improved until I could finally make a living from it. Unfortunately, that left me with little time for artwork. Now, as I try to rekindle my artistic side, I realize I’ve lost some of my practice! I hope to add more children’s books to my collection, which will give me plenty of chances to hone my skills again!

Here is a sampling, including a few of the frontispieces, pictures from the Ice Age Animal Index that appears at the back of each volume in the 8-book series, and several illustrations from the children’s book, KAW. (The Header image is also from KAW.)

PS: If you like Dreamer Book’s original artwork, you can find some of it on our Merch! See a selection of tees, hoodies, tote bags, mugs, and more HERE!

Illustration from KAW

 

Frontispiece from The Cave of Bones (colorized).
European cave lion (colorized, from Ice Age Animal Index)
Detail from The People of the Wolves frontispiece (colorized)
Reindeer (colorized, from Ice Age Animal Index)
Lynx (colorized, from Ice Age Animal Index)
Illustration from KAW
Roe deer (colorized, from Ice Age Animal Index)
Illustration from KAW
Eurasian wolf (colorized, from Ice Age Animal Index)
Woolly mammoth (colorized, from Ice Age Animal Index)

 

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Book 7 Released!

Dreamer Literary Productions is pleased to announce that The Dreamer VII ~ The Challenge Circle is now officially released, in Ebook, paperback, and hardcover formats!

The epic Ice Age adventure continues with this latest installment. Did you ever wonder what life was like for those who walked the Earth before us? Dreamer Books opens a literary portal to life during the last Glacial Maximum, what with all its challenges and drama, while simultaneously instilling an enduring sense of wonder at the resiliency and resourcefulness of our ancestors. The ongoing story celebrates the human spirit, and illustrates however much the settings may differ, people have little changed over the eons.

The next and final book in the series, The Dreamer VIII ~ The Talking Stones is due to be released in the summer of 2023.

Find Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga here!

Reader Reviews here!

And more about “The Birth of a Book Series” here!

(Image credits: book cover photo by Paula Kugerud Photography, Venus figurine pendant and lithics by Neanderthal Joe. Header photo and blog photo by E. A. Meigs)

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Neanderthal Joe and Life During the Paleolithic

This hour-long podcast is well worth your time: Anthony Yokolano from The Neanderthal Mind digs deep into mankind’s ancient past in this interview with Neanderthal Joe. (What a nice surprise to hear my name and my books mentioned during the discussion! Thanks for the plugs, Anthony and Neanderthal Joe!)

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Reach out and Contact Us!

In this case, the phrase Contact Us is a misnomer. As of now, there is no Us, only me.  Researching, writing, publishing, and promoting a Paleofiction book series is a huge undertaking, but I am delighted to be on this journey!

So, if you have any questions about Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga series, how to purchase the books (especially if you are seeking to make a wholesale purchase, or you live outside of the continental United States and need special shipping rates), please feel free to drop a line.

Also, I welcome opportunities to do interviews and give educational talks about life during the last Ice Age, early humans, and nature and Natural History.   Please let me know if you would like to discuss scheduling an interview or event.

Click>>> Contact: most queries are answered within 24 hours.

Thanks for your interest in Dreamer Books!

 

 

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New! The Dreamer VI ~ The Outsiders

Just in case you missed it, the latest installment in the Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga series was released earlier this summer!
The Dreamer VI ~ The Outsiders continues the ongoing adventure, as narrated by Tris, a young Neanderthal man.  Tris's thoughtful and sometimes droll perspective brings to life the struggles of ancient humans as they fight to survive in a hostile world.

All Dreamer Books are available in hardcover, paperback, and eBook formats. Click (below) to visit storefront page.

 


FYI: 

Free Printable Calendars!

(2021 & 2022 now available)

 

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A Day in the Life in a Neanderthal Clan

The sun has not yet crested the horizon, but a young Neanderthal woman named Soosha has already begun her day.  It is still dark when her infant’s whimper reaches her ears, signaling that his belly is empty and nappy, full.  Soosha retrieves the baby and removes a scrap of hide used as a diaper. Seeing that the absorbent cattail fluff within the diaper is soiled, she shakes it over their fire pit.  The dirty fluff falls onto the red coals of a dying fire, where it sends up an acrid plume of smoke.

The now squalling and impatient infant is cleansed and his nappy is repacked with clean fluff.  He calms as he is nursed, despite that his mother is simultaneously prodding the fire where the cattail fluff, even in it’s somewhat dampened state, has begun to burn.  Soosha carefully adds fuel to the flames to bring both light and warmth to their little home.  When the baby has dozed off again, Soosha tenderly kisses his forehead and he is put back to bed.   She then builds up the fire so their small earthen dwelling will be warm by the time the family arises from their slumber.

Now that it is autumn, the clan has settled into their winter lodgings. Their earthen homes are dug into a hillside and then shored-up with sections of tree trunks or large branches.  It is a cozy, if dark and somewhat claustrophobic place to wait out the coming days of sub-freezing temperatures and fierce winds.  Some of the clan stay here year-round: those who are not able to make long journeys as the rest follow game, setting up open-air homes at each site. The ones left behind are the most fragile of the clan, primarily the elderly and the injured. They keep animals at bay who might want to steal food stores, or invade the temporarily unoccupied homes.  The use of fire and marking their borders with urine discourages most animals from venturing too close.

Throughout the warmer months, the rest of the clan occasionally stops in from their travels to drop off meat, hides, and animal by-products.  This adds to what the permanent residents have been able to forage.  The in-ground homes have the benefit of being cool in the summer, as well as warm in the winter. While the near-constant temperature of 50 to 55 degrees may be quite a bit warmer than outdoor winter temperatures, it can feel chilly during summer.  Sometimes a low fire is maintained even on hot days to take the edge off the chill and for humidity control.  After years-long occupation of this site, most of the easily scavenged wood has already been burned.  Other than deadwood that sometimes falls from the trees, they must make short hikes to hew firewood with axes hafted with knapped-stone axe heads.  In addition to keeping fire pits fueled, the chimney holes must be kept clear of obstructions, such as brush that might catch fire, or snow accumulation during and after each snowstorm.

Neanderthal mother and her children start their day. (Illustration: E. A. Meigs)

For now, all is quiet.  Soosha is grateful the baby did not awaken his older siblings.  She slips back into the nest of bedding she shares with her mate, Killek. She snuggles contentedly against him, placing an arm around his warm back, and she is soon fast asleep.

It will not be not long before they will start their day. Killek and his older brother Tonk are going hunting and they must be away as early as possible.  When Soosha feels Killek rouse, she rises as well, and they both pull on various articles of clothing in the semi-darkness. They have a few lamps made from horns of a young aurochs, that they filled with fat and fitted with a twisted plant-fiber wick.  The lamps are used sparingly to conserve precious fuel, but Soosha lights one now to illuminate the chamber as they prepare  for the day’s activities.

While Killek ducks through the low, hide-covered doorway to retrieve an armload of wood, Soosha makes a simple breakfast of fresh berries and slivers of roast venison, leftover from their previous night’s meal. These foods are washed down with water, served in cups made from dried gourds.  After breaking their fast, man and woman work together in companionable silence to collect the things Killek will need to carry, although today he will be traveling light.  Ice Age winters meant bundling up in layers of clothing, but for now they can still venture out unencumbered by heavy animal skin coats, head coverings, mittens, and boots.

The hunters have been keeping an eye out for tree trunks sporting fresh scars from bucks that have been scraping them with their antlers. Such a place would be a good spot to ambush a buck, who generally returns each morning to see if does have visited in his absence.  Soosha is relieved that this will be a relatively routine hunt.  Any outing has the potential to be dangerous, but an encounter with a deer, even a buck during the rut, is no where near as perilous as an encounter with larger animals, such as aurochs, wisents, woolly rhinos, or worse still, woolly mammoths.

Woolly Rhino (Illustration credit: Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga, by E. A. Meigs)

Soosha takes comfort in knowing that Killek is in his prime; young enough to be at his peak of strength and stamina, but old enough to know how to avoid most hazards.  He is well built for the demands of his daily life.  Like most Neanderthal men, he is taller than she is, the top of her head is just a bit higher than his shoulder.  Although Killek is lean, he weighs considerably more than she does.  His powerful right arm has been so stressed by the forces it regularly exerts, that the bones are substantially thicker than those of his left arm, and the size of the muscle attachments on his right arm indicate heavy use.

Soosha, on the other hand, is small, but she is also strong.  Her daily chores are numerous, and often they require much strenuous labor, albeit, not as extreme as her mate’s.  The bones and muscle attachments on Neanderthal women’s arms were about equal, indicating that most Neanderthal men and women were specializing in different tasks.  (For more on sexual dimorphism: Scroll to pg. 129)

After Killek leaves with his brother, the children awaken, one by one.  The toddler is not yet fully weaned, and as mother and children settle by the fire, the tot climbs onto his mother’s lap to nurse.  When all the children are fed, she adds fuel to the fire and, infant on her hip, she then slings their empty water bag over her shoulder.  The family walks down to the stream, where Soosha places the baby in the arms of her six year old daughter, and bends to refill the bag in the rushing water.

As they stand at the stream, others from their clan also converge on the rivulet to replenish their water supply.  Most of the clan consists of related individuals.   They discuss plans to forage for various foods that day.  It is vitally important to harvest and preserve as many foodstuffs as they can for the coming winter.  Many of their chores involve working hides, processing plant fibers to make baskets or twine, or sewing clothing, footwear, sacks, and backpacks, but much of that will have to wait for the time when the last of autumn’s bounty has been collected.  As the season grows colder and bad weather often keeps them housebound, that will be the time to create the many things each family uses in their day-to-day lives.

European Cave Lion (Illustration credit: Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga, by E. A. Meigs)

Hunts may take place year-round, but spring and fall are an especially active time due to seasonal migrations and the annual ruts.  Spring hunts often take place on the faraway plains.  Game is abundant there, but so too are large predators, such as the cave lion.   The grasslands are a very dangerous place, not only because of threats posed by predators,  but also because the prey animals themselves can be downright huge.  If a serious injury is to occur, this is often where it happens.  Fossilized remains of Neanderthal men show signs of a very rough life (scroll down to “Fractures“). Their injuries are compared to those of rodeo riders, and amputations were not unknown.   Even smaller prey such as fallow deer or ibex still have the potential to gore or kick a hunter.

Fallow deer (Illustration credit: Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga, by E. A. Meigs)

While the clan goes about their day, Killek and Tonk march steadily through the forest. The air is absolutely still.  There is no wind to whisper among the tree branches or rustle the leaf-littered trail.  Despite their efforts to walk as quietly as possible, each step produces a slight but audible crunch.  Tonk and Killek continue until they reach the place where the buck has left his marks.   Bucks not only scrape their antlers on trees to rid themselves of the putrid shreds of velvet as it is slowly rotting off, but it is also a way of attracting does.  Between the antler scrapes and scrapes the buck has dug into the ground, does can pick up their scent and then decide if this buck is a potential mate or not.  Bucks renew their scrapes every day and stop to sniff at them, in hopes that they might include the aroma of a receptive doe. With luck, the hunters will be able to find this buck as it makes its daily rounds.  However, if the buck picks up human scent, there is a chance he will not approach at all.  The men could only conceal themselves in the nearby brush and hope for the best.

The sun rises higher.  Killek and Tonk remain absolutely motionless.  They have done this often enough over the years that they do not need to formulate a plan.  They simply await their prey and assuming he appears, dart out from their hiding places and lance him behind his forelegs with their spears, where they might hit the heart and lungs.  Birds and insects flit around them.  Even squirrels come to scamper nearby as though the two men were just another part of the forest.  At long last they hear the sounds of snapping twigs.  Something is coming.  The buck’s musky odor becomes more apparent as he closes in on them.  He is a young fallow deer with a modest set of antlers, but he appears well-nourished.  His tongue is out, as he tastes the air for the scent of does.  A few bits of miscellaneous foliage decorate his antlers.

Roe deer (Illustration credit: Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga, by E. A. Meigs)

The buck pauses to freshen the rut where he has pawed the earth with his hoofs and then deposits a stream of urine into the shallow trench. There, he does a brief dance, splashing the muddy liquid onto his forelegs.  Next, he steps up to the mark he has carved into the tree and sniffs, upper lip raised and pink tongue still protruding.  The buck positions himself to enlarge the scrape on the tree and at that moment Killek saw Tonk lift one finger very slightly. This is the signal to strike.

After the buck is ambushed, has expired, and is gutted, he is carried back to their collection of earthen dwellings, where he is skinned and butchered.  The buck is small in size, but nevertheless, clan members are pleased to see that the first hunt of the rutting season has been a success.

As the day winds down, the clan assembles around a central firepit to enjoy the fruits of their harvests in their evening sup.  The meat and organs of the buck are consumed in their entirety during this hearty meal, and his antlers and bones will be repurposed into tools, his sinews into threads, his hide into clothing.  Little goes to waste; in fact, every slain animal contributes many valuable resources to the clan’s welfare.

Afterwards, the group relaxes around the fire, enjoying conversation until it is time for the nightly story.  Soosha’s mate Killek is a Keeper of Stories, a role he inherited from his father.  Often he is asked to tell one of their traditional tales, one that has been retold for many generations.  This evening he recounts a story of The People of the Wolves.  When the fire has burned low and Killek’s tale is complete, the families bid one another good night.  Soon, winter will be upon them and it will be too cold for these outdoor gatherings,  but for now, they are an important part of the day.  They reinforce the bonds between those in the clan and add a pleasant diversion to what is often a harsh existence.

Ibex (Illustration credit: Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga, by E. A. Meigs)

 


This blog is less a story and more of an informational piece (unlike my books, which are stories – although I make every attempt to make them as scientifically accurate as possible ). It contains some scientific data, but also considerable conjecture derived from many decades of reading scientific papers, books, and articles (and personal experience and formal study). Early humans left scant evidence to tell us about their lives, so we are left to speculate on tantalizing clues. Theories change frequently and some theories directly contradict each other, making it challenging to draw an accurate picture of life during prehistoric times. I strive to collect data from many sources and collate that which I feel is the most probable into a coherent hypothesis that includes not only paleoanthropology, but also zoology, climatology, and ancient survival tactics.

As you may have guessed, I have endowed my Neanderthal characters with the intelligence and skills needed to survive in an Eurasian Ice Age setting. I believe they would have needed winter shelters that can withstand extreme weather, and temporary open air shelters to be used when following game during warmer seasons. Also, they required a means of heating and lighting their homes throughout long winters, ample ability to hunt and forage a wide variety of foods and materials, and manufacture fitted (although perhaps not terribly stylish by our standards) clothing, footwear, and outerwear.

The Neanderthal endured through some of the most inhospitable conditions mankind has ever faced for over 200,000 years(longer, if you include the proto-Neanderthal). Out of necessity, they would have been master outdoorsmen and owned comprehensive knowledge on how to leverage every resource to its utmost advantage. I eagerly await each new discovery as science continues to explore historical clues left by our early human ancestors, and bring more of their legacy to light.

Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga brings to life an era that is well known for its megafauna and brutal climate, and peopled it with those who must wrest a livelihood from a fierce wilderness.  Their harrowing adventures help to strengthen families and forge powerful friendships.  Then, as now, it is survival and the preservation and continuation of our clans that drives us.

 

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“The Outsiders” Now One Step Closer to Publication!

“The Dreamer VI ~ The Outsiders” is now in the hands of the copy editor!

The latest installment in the ongoing Ice Age saga is still on-track to be published this summer!  Embark on a journey to an ancient land; to a time when life was broken down to its most basic elements and survival depended upon strength of mind and body, and the strength of relationships with those around you.

Edit: The Dreamer VI ~ The Outsiders was published in July 2021! Find it in hardcover, paperback, and eBook at https://dreamerliteraryproductions.com/
Graphics by E. A. Meigs. Cover photo by Paula Krugerud.
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Cave Lion: One Big Cat!

Eurasian Cave Lion (Illustration credit: Dreamer Books: An Ice Age Saga, by E. A. Meigs)

The Eurasian Cave Lion (Panthera spelaea)  is known to us mostly through its fossilized skeletal remains and the exquisitely detailed imagery left behind by early humans on cave walls.  The fossils tell a tale of a large predator, somewhat bigger than today’s African lions.  They may have been as much as 11 and a half feet in length from their nose to the tip of their tail, and reached weights of up to 880 pounds.  Male cave lions are depicted without manes in cave art.  Some of the ancient paintings seem to show faint striping on parts of the cave lion’s body.

These impressive animals are included in several of the Dreamer Book Series: An Ice Age Saga novels; as they surely would have been well known to Ice Age humans and been a source of awe and -at least occasionally- terror, to those who encountered them.  This versatile and fearsome hunter was known to inhabit most of Eurasia and the very northwestern parts of the North American continent.

In 2015 two cave lion cubs were discovered where they had been buried in a landslide in Siberia, and were preserved in permafrost for tens of thousands of years.  The approximately two week old kittens were were an astounding find and have done much to contribute to our understanding of these animals.  A well-preserved third cub, about six to eight weeks old at time of death, was also found in permafrost in 2017.   Lastly, a fourth cub was located in 2018.  It was found near the 2017 cub; close enough to make scientists think that it might have been a sibling.   There is speculation that future digs might reveal the existence of more siblings, or possibly even the remains of the cubs’ mother.

The most recent Eurasian cave lion remains have been dated to about 14,000 years *BCE.  They are believed to have gone extinct by 10,000 years *BCE.

*BCE = Before Common Era.

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