Lodi News-Sentinel

Study sheds light on why humans are social creatures

- By Deborah Netburn

New discoverie­s in eastern Africa suggest that human behaviors like symbolic thought and the creation of extended social networks were establishe­d at least 320,000 years ago — tens of thousands of years earlier than previously thought.

The work, published as a trio of papers Thursday in Science, sheds new light on the often murky story of when our ancestors first started acting like humans, and why, experts said.

“What we are seeing is a complex set of developmen­ts that may represent new ways of surviving in an unpredicta­ble environmen­t,” said Rick Potts, a paleoanthr­opologist and director of the Smithsonia­n’s Human Origins program. “It is a package we didn’t know occurred so early, and right at the root of our species.”

For more than 30 years, Potts has led excavation­s in southern Kenya at a site known as the Olorgesail­ie Basin, which was occupied by hominids for more than 1 million years.

The 50-square-mile area has yielded a sequence of stone tools that date back as far as 1.2 million years, allowing researcher­s to see how human technology and behavior has changed over time.

The authors found that for roughly 700,000 years, from 1.2 million to 499,000 years ago, the hominids who populated this basin relied almost entirely on one simple, allpurpose stone tool known as a hand ax. It was generally between 4 and 10 inches long, shaped like a teardrop and chipped all the way around.

Anthropolo­gists believe this basic hand ax was used for a variety of purposes, including cutting through joints of large animals, chopping down trees and digging in the ground for roots, tubers or water.

“It was very successful for a long period of time when fluctuatio­ns in the environmen­t were somewhat modest,” Potts said. “Then all hell broke loose.”

Geological evidence from the site indicates that around 499,000 years ago, the region experience­d tremendous upheaval. Volcanic activity increased, and new faults developed in Earth’s crust. This led to earthquake­s that destroyed the ancient lake basin and pushed it up out of the ground. Because of this, there is a gap in the archaeolog­ical record of about 180,000 years when no new sediments were laid down at the site.

Over time, however, wind and rain caused river channels to form in what once was the lake basin, and eventually new sediment layers began to form. These processes led to a more recent set of archaeo- logical data that starts about 320,000 years ago and continues until 3,000 years ago.

When Potts and his colleagues began excavating the newer material from the river channels, they found that hominid behavior at the Olorgesail­ie Basin had changed completely between the time the lake sedimentat­ion ended and the river sedimentat­ion began.

For example, the hand axes had been replaced by smaller, more sophistica­ted tools that could be attached to sticks and hurled through the air. In addition, the team found that some of the obsidian rock used to make the new tools came from 25 to 30 miles away. In the older sediments, nearly all the material used to create tools originated within 5 miles of the site.

Alison Brooks, a paleoanthr­opologist and Paleolithi­c archaeolog­ist at George Washington University who contribute­d to the new work, said it is unlikely that hunter and gatherer societies of that time period would have been able to travel such great distances to procure materials for their weapons.

Instead, the discovery of the transporte­d obsidian suggests that as early as 320,000 years ago, hominids had establishe­d social networks that allowed them to exchange gifts with groups from more distant lands, she said. In addition, these relationsh­ips could have been strong enough for individual­s to turn to their neighbors in times of need.

“Social networks are an extremely important part of early human societies,” Brooks said. “Pastoralis­ts can store food or add cattle to their herds, but for hunter-gatherers, the only way to save for a rainy day is to have friends in distant places.”

The researcher­s also found evidence that these socially connected hominids were making pigments from rocks, which implies they were sophistica­ted enough to be capable of symbolic thought. This might have made communicat­ion between disparate groups easier.

The authors suggest these new behaviors were not the inevitable result of evolution, but rather a response to massive geological and climate changes that began about 500,000 years ago. Indeed, the fossil record from the site indicates that between 499,000 and 320,000 years ago, 85 percent of the region’s animals became extinct and were replaced by new lineages and entirely new species.

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