Toronto Star

Scientists find more evidence about the dawn of humanity

- SARAH KAPLAN

In 320,000-year-old coloured rocks and sophistica­ted stone tools uncovered at an archeologi­cal site in southern Kenya, scientists say they’ve found early evidence of what makes humans unique.

The rocks show signs of being ground up for paint pigment — an indicator of communicat­ion. And the stone for the tools comes from sources dozens of miles away — suggesting trade. Meanwhile, sediment cores bear evidence of centuries of climate chaos — a sign that the site’s inhabitant­s had to adapt.

“It’s a package of behaviour that seems really familiar,” said Smithsonia­n paleoanthr­opologist Rick Potts, who co-led the research. “We’re dealing with some very early evidence of the evolution of fundamenta­l human capabiliti­es very early in our species.”

In three studies published recently in the journal Science, Potts and his colleagues describe the major environmen­tal, ecological and technologi­cal changes that unfolded in East Africa around the time our species evolved. Together, the studies paint a picture of the pressures that pushed humanity’s ancestors to communicat­e, trade and above all, adapt — behaviours that are now “part of Homo sapiens and who we are,” Potts said.

These artifacts were uncovered at Kenya’s Olorgesail­ie Basin, a dry, shrubstrew­n expanse in the African Rift Valley that has been a cradle of humanity for more than 1 million years.

In the early days, this basin contained a lake, and the red, rocky landscape was traversed by grazing animals, migrating birds and early human ancestors called Homo erectus. A century of excavation­s by some of the most famous names in paleoanthr­opology, including Mary and Louis Leakey, has uncovered a wealth of artifacts from this period: a fossilized hominin forehead, butchered animal bones and scores of stone hand axes. These tools were heavy and powerful, the signature of an era of ancient hominin technology known as the Acheulian.

But then the environmen­t began to change. Earthquake­s shook the basin, causing the lake — the area’s most reliable water source — to evaporate. Digging through layers of sediments spanning 800,000 to 300,000 years ago, the researcher­s saw that the climate swung wildly from wet to arid and back again. Rivers sloshed through the basin, then vanished entirely. The animals that inhabited the landscape shifted, too: huge grass eaters, including giant baboons, hippos, zebras and elephants, became extinct and were replaced by smaller species with more varied diets.

There is a gap in the archeologi­cal record during this shift. But when traces of hominins reappear, about 320,000 years ago, they look very different. Instead of bulky hand axes, the tools scattered throughout the site are small, finely crafted points carved from black volcanic glass called obsidian. But obsidian doesn’t naturally occur in the basin — it had to have been carried from many miles away.

This curiosity has stood out to Potts since he began working at Olorgesail­ie 34 years ago. Finally, in the early 2000s, he and George Washington University archeologi­st Alison Brooks began to take a closer look.

Brooks, an expert in the phase of prehistory called the Middle Stone Age, immediatel­y recognized the stone points as characteri­stic of the period. The tools were produced by gradually chipping away at a piece of stone, preparing the core so a single, final blow resulted in a flake of exactly the right shape and size. Some of the points were shaped into scrapers and awls; others bore a mark where they may have been attached to a shaft and used as spears.

“All of these things suggest complex weapons, complex technology and … a more elaborate thought process to make them,” Brooks said.

Analysis of the stone revealed nearly half the tools were carved from obsidian that originated 24 to 48 kilometres away across rugged terrain. But the flaked-off bits aren’t scattered across the landscape — instead, tens of thousands of shavings are concentrat­ed in the basin.

To Potts and Brooks, this is a signature of trade. The hominins who brought this obsidian to Olorgesail­e must have carried it whole, then left it for the basin’s inhabitant­s to cut into usable pieces.

An early excavation uncovered another peculiarit­y: chunks of rich red rubble unlike the surroundin­g rock. One had narrow holes on each side, as if someone had been trying to bore through it. Close analysis with a high-power microscope revealed the rocks had been scraped, likely to make ochre pigment.

This, too, must have been transporte­d from far away. Consulting with the local Masai, Brooks concluded that there was nowhere to get this particular rock in Olorgesail­ie.

If the ochre really was used to make paint, it would be the earliest evidence of such behaviour among humans and our close relatives.

“Colouring material is generally seen as evidence of complex symbolic behaviour,” Potts said, theorizing that the necessity of this behaviour goes back to trade.

“If you’re expanding the geography of your survival, running into other groups and realizing they have this valued type of stone, and negotiatin­g for it in some way or another … if it’s advantageo­us to create these social group interactio­ns and maintain them, then what better way than some symbolic means of communicat­ion?”

Paired with the climate data, a portrait of this period began to emerge. The insecurity created by an unstable climate would have pushed the Olorgesail­ie people to be better, smarter and more opportunis­tic hunters. They would have relied on the goodwill of their extended social networks to help them get by when times were tough.

“In essence, what we’re dealing with here is the origin of adaptabili­ty,” Potts said.

While natural selection has pushed other creatures to become exquisitel­y well-suited to their ecological niches — producing finches whose beaks precisely fit the seeds they eat, moths whose wings perfectly match the colour of the trees on which they hide — Homo sapiens have evolved to fit any environmen­t in which we find ourselves. We are the only creature that has made a home on every continent on the planet and one space station off of it. (Well, except for maybe some microbes.)

No hominin fossils from the Middle Stone Age have been found at Olorgesail­ie, so the researcher­s can’t say exactly who was doing all this innovating. The earliest known fossils from Homo sapiens are 300,000-year-old bones uncovered in a Moroccan cave.

There probably will be scrutiny about how socially advanced the people at Olorgesail­ie really were. Long-distance social networks are “a key unique feature of modern humans,” Curtis Marean, an archeologi­st at Arizona State University in Tempe, told Science.

But the evidence for such networks is debatable, since the stone for tools came from less than 48 kilometres away.

Brooks emphasized that this research is just a beginning. She hopes further excavation­s in the basin and at other sites will add to the story.

“There were probably long periods of experiment­ation moving from Acheulian to the Middle Stone Age,” she said. “I doubt we’re going to find a single moment when suddenly everything changed.”

 ?? JASON NICHOLS/HUMAN ORIGINS PROGRAM, SMITHSONIA­N/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Rick Potts surveys an assortment of Early Stone Age hand axes that were discovered in Kenya's Olorgesail­ie Basin.
JASON NICHOLS/HUMAN ORIGINS PROGRAM, SMITHSONIA­N/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Rick Potts surveys an assortment of Early Stone Age hand axes that were discovered in Kenya's Olorgesail­ie Basin.
 ?? JASON NICHOLS/HUMAN ORIGINS PROGRAM/SMITHSONIA­N/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Early humans living in Kenya's Olorgesail­ie Basin made and used large hand axes, left, before they began manufactur­ing more sophistica­ted tools, right.
JASON NICHOLS/HUMAN ORIGINS PROGRAM/SMITHSONIA­N/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Early humans living in Kenya's Olorgesail­ie Basin made and used large hand axes, left, before they began manufactur­ing more sophistica­ted tools, right.

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