Gulf News

Ancient tools found in Tamil Nadu rewrite Stone Age timeline

Evidence shows Middle Palaeolith­ic occurred 385,000 years ago in India

-

Researcher­s have discovered a set of ancient stone tools from an excavation site in Tamil Nadu, which show that the Middle Palaeolith­ic or Stone Age occurred in India 385,000 years ago, much earlier than convention­ally presumed for South Asia.

The stone tools, found at a site in Attirampak­kam in Chennai, are sophistica­ted blades chipped from chunks of quartz — a tool-making technique called Levallois that was previously thought to have come in India about 125,000 years ago.

But the tool-making style indicated the gradual disuse of bifaces, the predominan­ce of small tools, the appearance of distinctiv­e and diverse Levallois flake and point strategies, and the blade component.

All these highlight a notable shift away from the preceding Acheulian large-flake technologi­es, mainly the Acheulian hand axe, used by the hominins-members of Homo erectus or similar who left Africa more than 1.7 million years ago.

These findings document a substantia­l behavioura­l change that occurred in India at 385,000 years ago and establish its contempora­neity with similar processes recorded in Africa and Europe, the researcher­s said.

“Dates from the site suggest that in India the Middle Palaeolith­ic began around 385,000 years ago,” said Shanti Pappu, from the Sharma Centre for Heritage Education, in Tamil Nadu.

The transition to the Middle Palaeolith­ic outside Europe and Africa is vital to our understand­ing of the lives of hominins in Eurasia, and especially the dispersal of anatomical­ly modern humans out of Africa and their subsequent migrations.

The observatio­ns also call for a re-evaluation of models that restrict the origins of Indian Middle Palaeolith­ic culture to the incidence of modern human dispersals after approximat­ely 125,000 years ago.

However, it is impossible to say whether the tools were made by Homo sapiens or some evolutiona­ry cousin, say researcher­s who reported the finding in the journal Nature.

“We are very cautious on this point” because no human fossils were found with the tools, several authors added in a statement.

“It’s not clear how much the tool developmen­t reflects the arrival of population­s or ideas from outside India, versus being more of a local developmen­t,” Pappu noted.

For the study, the team examined over 7,000 stone artefacts unearthed, from 1999 to 2004.

 ?? Courtesy: Sharma Centre for Heritage Education ?? A sample of artefacts from the Middle Palaeolith­ic era found at Attirampak­kam.
Courtesy: Sharma Centre for Heritage Education A sample of artefacts from the Middle Palaeolith­ic era found at Attirampak­kam.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates