As I have posted in the past, when an archeological discovery is
made, the artifacts inevitably are a reflecting a tradition that is
already mature and often fully globalized. We only avoid that
somewhat when we come to South Africa were they really had first dibs
in the human experience.
Here we round up the first good evidence that stone working is at
least 500,000 years old. These are spear points and that is a very
valuable weapon. Not so much for hunting as to fend of unfriendly
carnivores. A spear can take down a lion as has been shown even in
historical times.
Taking down game still requires coming up close and personal and a
spear can hold them back when they turn on the hunter. Throwing a
stone tipped spear would be risky though and the tip would also
shatter. The bow ultimately solved that problem. Before that it
made more sense to be able to confront exhausted or cornered prey
with a hand held defensive weapon.
This is a
~500,000-year-old point from Kathu Pan 1. Multiple lines of evidence
from a University of Toronto-led study indicate that points from
Kathu Pan 1 were used as hafted spear tips. Scale bar = 1 cm.
(Credit: Jayne Wilkins)
Nov. 15, 2012 — A
collaborative study involving researchers at Arizona State
University, the University of Toronto, and the University of Cape
Town found that human ancestors were making stone-tipped weapons
500,000 years ago at the South African archaeological site of Kathu
Pan 1 -- 200,000 years earlier than previously thought. This study,
"Evidence for Early Hafted Hunting Technology," is
published in the November 16 issue of the journal Science.
Attaching stone points
to spears (known as "hafting") was an important advance in
hunting weaponry for early humans. Hafted tools require more effort
and foreplanning to manufacture, but a sharp stone point on the end
of a spear can increase its killing power.
"There is a
reason that modern bow-hunters tip their arrows with razor-sharp
edges. These cutting tips are extremely lethal when compared to the
effects from a sharpened stick. Early humans learned this fact
earlier than previously thought," said Benjamin Schoville, a
coauthor of this study and doctoral student affiliated with the
Institute of Human Origins, a research center of the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University.
Hafted spear tips are
common in Stone Age archaeological sites after 300,000 years ago.
This study shows that hafted spear tips were also used in the early
Middle Pleistocene, a period associated with Homo
heidelbergensis, the last common ancestor of Neandertals and modern
humans.
"Rather than
being invented twice, or by one group learning from the other,
stone-tipped spear technology was in place much earlier," said
Schoville. "Although both Neandertals and humans used
stone-tipped spears, this is the first evidence that this technology
originated prior to or near the divergence of these two species."
"It now looks
like some of the traits that we associate with modern humans and our
nearest relatives can be traced further back in our lineage,"
said Jayne Wilkins, lead author from the University of Toronto. "This
changes the way we think about early human adaptations and capacities
before the origin of our own species."
Point function was
determined by comparing wear on the ancient points to damage
inflicted on modern experimental points used to spear a springbok
carcass target with a calibrated crossbow. This method has been used
effectively to study weaponry from more recent contexts in the Middle
East and southern Africa.
"When points are
used as spear tips, there is a lot of damage that forms at the tip of
the point, and large distinctive fractures form. The damage on these
ancient stone spear points is remarkably similar to those produced
with our calibrated crossbow experiment, and we demonstrate they are
not easily created from other processes," said coauthor Kyle
Brown, a skilled stone tool replicator with the University of Cape
Town.
The points were
recovered during 1979-1982 excavations by Peter Beaumont of the
McGregor Museum, Kimberly, South Africa.
In 2010, a team
directed by coauthor Michael Chazan from the University of Toronto
reported that the point-bearing deposits at KP1 dated to around
500,000 years ago using optically stimulated luminescence and
U-series/electron spin resonance methods. The dating analyses were
carried out by Naomi Porat, Geological Survey of Israel, and Rainer
GrĂ¼n, Australian National University.
Funding for this
research was provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council of Canada, the National Science Foundation, and the Hyde
Family Foundation, and with important logistical support from the
South African Heritage Resources Agency and the McGregor Museum.
The Institute of Human
Origins is the leading research organization in the United States
devoted to the science of human origins. Embedded within ASU's School
of Human Evolution and Social Change, the institute pursues a
transdisciplinary strategy for field and analytical
paleoanthropological research central to its 30-year-old founding
mission -- integrating social, earth, and life science approaches to
the most important questions concerning the course, timing, and
causes of human evolutionary change over deep time. The institute
links to its research activities innovative public outreach programs
that create timely, accurate information for education and lay
communities.
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