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160,000-year-old sophisticated stone tools discovered in China may not have been made by Homo sapiens
Archaeologists have found the oldest known evidence of hafted tools in East Asia, and they challenge a previously held ...
"Researchers have argued for decades that while hominins in Africa and western Europe demonstrated significant technological ...
Archaeologists in central China have uncovered evidence that early humans were far more inventive than long assumed. Excavations at the Xigou site reveal advanced stone tools, including the earliest ...
A newly excavated archaeological site in central China is reshaping long-held assumptions about early hominin behavior in ...
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Ancient stone tools in China reveal an unexpectedly early start to human technology
Old beliefs about early human behavior in East Asia are being challenged by the discovery of a richly-layered archaeological ...
Learn how archaeologists dated stone tools from central China and what they reveal about when early humans in Asia began using complex tools.
Ancient tools from central China are flipping the script, revealing early humans were far more innovative than history once gave them credit for.
The ancestors of humans started making tools about 3.3 million years ago. First they made them out of stone, then they switched to bone as a raw material. Until recently, the earliest clear evidence ...
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Early humans relied on simple stone tools for 300,000 years in a changing east African landscape
Our prehistoric human ancestors relied on deliberately modified and sharpened stone tools as early as 3.3 million years ago.
ANTH copy has bookplate: Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Gift from the Margery Masinter Foundation Endowment for Illustrated Books. "In Stone Tools in Human Evolution, John J. Shea argues that over ...
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