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===Exploitation=== {{Further information|Bear hunting}} [[File:Eskimo hunter and polar bear slain with bow and arrow LCCN2005691848 (cropped).jpg|thumb|left|Hunter with polar bear slain with bow and arrow in Alaska (1924)]] Polar bears were hunted as early as 8,000 years ago, as indicated by archaeological remains at [[Zhokhov Island]] in the [[East Siberian Sea]]. The oldest graphic depiction of a polar bear shows it being hunted by a man with three dogs. This [[rock art]] was among several [[petroglyph]]s found at [[Pegtymel]] in Siberia and dates from the fifth to eighth centuries. Before access to firearms, native people used lances, bows and arrows and hunted in groups accompanied by dogs. Though hunting typically took place on foot, some people killed swimming bears from boats with a harpoon. Polar bears were sometimes killed in their dens. Killing a polar bear was considered a [[rite of passage]] for boys in some cultures. Native people respected the animal and hunts were subject to strict rituals.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=122β124, 130, 133}} Bears were harvested for the fur, meat, fat, tendons, bones and teeth.{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=28}}{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=128}} The fur was worn and slept on, while the bones and teeth were made into tools. For the Netsilik, the individual who finally killed the bear had the right to its fur while the meat was passed to all in the party. Some people kept the cubs of slain bears.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=127β128, 132}} [[File:Greenland-polarbear-skin hg.jpg|thumb|right|Skins of hunted bears in Greenland]] Norsemen in Greenland traded polar bear furs in the Middle Ages.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=34β35}} Russia traded polar bear products as early as 1556, with [[Novaya Zemlya]] and [[Franz Josef Land]] being important commercial centres. Large-scale hunting of bears at Svalbard occurred since at least the 18th century, when no less than 150 bears were killed each year by Russian explorers. In the next century, more Norwegians were harvesting the bears on the island. From the 1870s to the 1970s, around 22,000 of the animals were hunted in total. Over 150,000 polar bears in total were either killed or captured in Russia and Svalbard, from the 18th to the 20th century. In the Canadian Arctic, bears were harvested by commercial whalers especially if they could not get enough whales. The [[Hudson's Bay Company]] is estimated to have sold 15,000 polar bear coats between the late 19th century and early 20th century.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=246β249}} In the mid-20th century, countries began to regulate polar bear harvesting, culminating in the 1973 agreement.<ref name=International1973/> Polar bear meat was commonly eaten as rations by explorers and sailors in the Arctic, to widely varying appraisal. Some have called it too coarse and strong-smelling to eat, while others have praised it as a "royal dish".{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=141}} The liver was known for being too toxic to eat. This is due to the accumulation of [[vitamin A]] from the bears' prey.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=27}} Polar bear fat was also used in lamps when other fuel was unavailable.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=141}} Polar bear rugs were almost ubiquitous on the floors of Norwegian churches by the 13th and 14th centuries. In more modern times, classical Hollywood actors would pose on bearskin rugs, notably [[Marilyn Monroe]]. Such images often had sexual connotations.{{sfn|Fee|2019|pp=32, 131β133}}
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