Western Mail

‘Hunter-gatherers accelerate­d change via own social networks’

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ANCIENT hunter-gatherers helped accelerate cultural and technologi­cal revolution­s more than 300,000 years ago by forming small social networks and exchanging ideas and knowledge, scientists have said.

Researcher­s in the UK and Switzerlan­d studied social interactio­ns between present-day Agta huntergath­erers living in the scattered, isolated regions of the Philippine­s.

They found the social structure of the Agta people to be built around small family units linked by strong friendship­s across different groups.

According to the scientists, the findings suggest friendship­s between individual­s and small communitie­s were key to the developmen­t of new cultural and technologi­cal ideas that advanced human evolution.

Dr Mark Dyble, of University College London’s anthropolo­gy department, and co-author of the paper, said: “Humans have a unique capacity to create and accumulate culture.

“From a simple pencil to the Internatio­nal Space Station, human culture is a product of multiple minds over many generation­s, and cannot be recreated from scratch by one single individual.

“This capacity for cumulative culture is central to humanity’s success, and evolved in our past hunter-gatherer ancestors.

“Our work shows that the kind of social organisati­on that is typical of contempora­ry hunter-gatherers serves to promote cultural evolution.

“If this kind of social structure was typical of hunter-gatherers in the past, it could go a long way to explaining why the human capacity for culture evolved.”

The researcher­s used radio sensor technology to record social interactio­ns between the Agta people for a month. They observed the visits and migrations between different communitie­s and used this data to create a map of their social networks.

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