Recent research has found that, not only did Paleolithic hominids (including homo sapiens) and even chimps hunt effectively, but even females of these species may have done more hunting than was assumed. Among chimps, females appear in early research to be MORE aggressive and effective in at least one type of hunting (for bushbabies), and teach their hunting techniques to the younger chimps.
Female chimps move to fore in hunting.
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Female+chimps+move+to+fore+in+hunting.(Tools+for+Prey)-a0160812407"Woman the Hunter: The Agta"
Agnes Estioko-Griffin and P. Bion Griffin
http://www.ndnu.edu/about-us/mission_diversity/documents/Estioko-Griffin-WomantheHuntertheAgta.pdf"in contradiction of one of the sacred canons of anthropology, [Agta] women in one area [of northeastern Luzon in the Philippines] frequently hunt game animals. They also fish in the rivers with the men and barter with lowland Filipinos for goods and services."
Extensive Female hunting by some Agta appears to be an adaptation to their environment:
"1) Many Agta never heard of women hunters
2) Female Agta hunters hunt close to camp (<10 km)
3) Women use dogs
4) Many women hunters were
sterile or post-reproductive
5) Carbohydrate roots were sparse and unprofitable"
From: "Lecture 6: Sexual Division of Labor, ANTH 129MG (Winter 2008): Behavioral ecology of hunter-gatherers,"
Dr. Michael Gurven, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of California-Santa Barbarahttp://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~sangin/HBE/hglect6.pdf
Stone Age feminism? Females joining hunt may explain Neanderthals' end
http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2007/11/10/stone_age_feminism/"Female Hunters in the Pleistocene?", Christopher H. Boehm, Director of the Jane Goodall Research Center, Professor of Anthropology and Biological Sciences, Society for Scientific Anthropology, Talk/Oral Presentation, New Orleans, 2008