Early humans were regularly using animal bones to make cutting tools 1.5 million years ago. A newly discovered cache of 27 ...
Now, researchers have uncovered a substantial cache of prehistoric bone tools in the same region dating back 1.5 million years. It's the oldest collection of mass-produced bone tools yet known, ...
For millions of years, early human ancestors relied on stone tools to shape their world. The discovery of a collection of 27 standardized bone tools dating back 1.5 million years challenges long-held ...
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An archaeological discovery in the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania has changed our understanding of the technological evolution of ...
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AnyMind Group, a leading provider of business process-as-a-service (BPaaS) solutions, has published its Asia E-commerce ...
The oldest collection of mass-produced prehistoric bone tools reveal that human ancestors were likely capable of more advanced abstract reasoning one million years earlier than thought, finds a new ...
Archaeologists have uncovered a collection of bone tools in northern Tanzania that were shaped by ancient human ancestors 1 ...
Bone artifacts discovered in Tanzania push back the earliest known date of bone tool technology by over a million years. In ...
Our ancestors were making tools out of bones 1.5 million years ago, winding back the clock for this important moment in human evolution by more than a million years, a study said Wednesday.