Cape Times

New discovery hammers home prehistory progress

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LONDON: The oldest stone tools ever discovered, dating back 3.3 million years, have been unearthed in Kenya.

The tools, which were created some 700 000 years before the previous most-ancient stone implements, have been hailed as a “new beginning to the known archaeolog­ical record”.

More than 100 primitive hammers, anvils and other stone artefacts have been unearthed in the desert hills bordering the western shores of Lake Turkana in the Kenyan Rift Valley.

The discovery undermines the argument that making stone tools was a defining characteri­stic of the direct human lineage leading to the emergence of Homo sapiens, because it required a unique combinatio­n of manual dexterity and cognitive ability.

The stone tools predate the earliest known members of the Homo genus by about half-a-million years, suggesting that the implements were made by another species of “hominin” – the non-ape human tribe – which may or may not have been one of our direct ancestors, scientists said.

Scientists do not yet know which species made the stone tools, but they suggest that a possible candidate is a “flat-faced”, ape-like hominin called Kenyanthro­pus platyops, which was known to have lived in the same place at the same time.

“This is a momentous and well-researched discovery. I have seen some of these artefacts in the flesh, and I am convinced they were fashioned deliberate­ly,” said Professor Bernard Wood, of the George Washington University in Washington DC.

The origin of stone tool-making is seen as crucial to the understand­ing of human prehistory because ultimately it led to greater social co-operation in hunting and the later evolution of more sophistica­ted tools and weapons made of flint, wood and animal bone.

“They shed light on an unexpected and previously unknown period of hominin behaviour and can tell us a lot about cognitive developmen­t in our ancestors that we can’t understand from fossils alone,” said Sonia Harmand, of New York’s Stony Brook University and lead author of the study published in the journal Nature. – The Independen­t

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