China Daily (Hong Kong)

Hand-ax relics hailed as breakthrou­gh

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

Groundbrea­king archaeolog­ical finds of stone tools on the QinghaiTib­etan Plateau offer crucial clues to how early-stage modern humans migrated across Eurasia more than 100,000 years ago.

More than 6,000 stone and earthen artifacts have been discovered at the Piluo site in Daocheng county, Sichuan province, the National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion said at a news conference on Monday. Piluo is the largest known, best preserved archaeolog­ical site from the Paleolithi­c period — dating from roughly 2.5 million years ago to around 10,000 years ago — on the plateau.

Highlights of the discoverie­s include Acheulean hand axes, which have been found mainly in prehistori­c sites across Africa and the western coast of Eurasian

continent. This type of relic, first found in France, is generally considered by scholars to represent the highest level of tool manufactur­ing at the time.

The Piluo site was found in May 2020, and archaeolog­ical excavation formally began in April. Newly unearthed artifacts thus became the world’s highest-altitude finding — at 3,750 meters above sea level — of Acheulean tools, the designatio­n for a Lower Paleolithi­c culture’s skillfully made flint axes.

Tuesday marked the first anniversar­y of General Secretary Xi Jinping’s delivery of the keynote speech at the 23rd group study session of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee. He emphasized the significan­ce of archaeolog­ical studies to better explore unknown parts of Chinese history and reveal the origins of the country’s various cultures.

Following the guidance, Chinese archaeolog­ists endeavored to touch on less-explored areas in the past year to make breakthrou­ghs through interdisci­plinary research, said Chen Xingcan, head of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of Archaeolog­y, who had offered suggestion­s on last year’s group study. See Findings, page 4

Chen said at Monday’s news conference that the discovery of the Piluo site is “world class” and an outstandin­g example of the recent breakthrou­ghs, because it offers precious and solid evidence of Acheulean tools among Chinese archaeolog­ical artifacts.

Previously, such tools were only occasional­ly found in China and were usually thought to be rougher than their counterpar­ts found farther west.

“It’s still a new finding, and we’ve just touched the tip of an iceberg,” Chen said. “We have no idea how many discoverie­s will be made within such a huge site.”

Archaeolog­ical investigat­ion indicates that the Piluo site covers more than 1 square kilometer, including 60 heritage spots, but only 200 square meters have been excavated so far.

Hand axes from the site’s upper layer are believed to have been made at least 130,000 years ago, and the process of dating the ones found in lower layers is still ongoing, according to Zheng Zhexuan, an archaeolog­ist with the Sichuan Provincial Cultural Relics and Archaeolog­y Research Institute.

“They’re so far the most exquisite and most complete Acheulean tools in East Asia,” Zheng said. The findings “also filled a gap of academic research to indicate how human beings migrated and thus brought cultural communicat­ion during that ancient time”.

Seven consecutiv­e layers of earth that were minimally disturbed by natural erosion provided the first sequence for studying the culture of the Paleolithi­c period in Southwest China and also set a chronologi­cal benchmark for other sites, Zheng added.

He also said that finding the hand axes on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau offers crucial clues for the study of early humans’ ability to conquer the harsh natural environmen­t and the beginning of human settlement­s on the plateau.

Gao Xing, a researcher with the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontolo­gy and Paleoanthr­opology, said that such axes, which are symmetrica­l and made not only for functional­ity, are “the first tool in human history with a designed shape”.

“They reflect early humans’ aesthetics, wisdom and technology,” Gao said. “In its time, we can hardly say a culture was Western or Eastern. People migrated afar, communicat­ed with each other and mixed together. This process is a historical foundation for today’s community of shared future for mankind, and the hand ax thus offers inspiratio­n to us today.”

Also at the news conference on Monday, other key recent Paleolithi­c findings were described.

For example, in the Xianrendon­g cave site in Lushan county, Henan province, human bone fossils from 30,000 to 50,000 years ago were found. Unearthed stone tools showed little influence from the West and had close links to older local cultures.

“It thus offered very important clues to solve disputes on the origins of modern humans,” said Zhao Qingpo, an archaeolog­ist with the Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Heritage and Archaeolog­y.

Gao, the researcher, said Paleolithi­c sites “are much less noticed by the public compared with those from later periods because they lacked eye-catching artifacts. However, without knowing them well, we cannot define who we are today, and neither can we foresee our future.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Acheulean hand axes unearthed from the Piluo site in Daocheng county, Sichuan province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Acheulean hand axes unearthed from the Piluo site in Daocheng county, Sichuan province.
 ?? CHINA DAILY ??
CHINA DAILY

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