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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 ...
Live Science on MSN
430,000-year-old wooden handheld tools from Greece are the oldest on record — and they predate modern humans
Archaeologists have found the oldest-known surviving examples of handheld wooden tools.
Discovery of complex pre-historic tools in China suggests our ancestors were far more advanced than thought - Find suggests ...
A newly excavated archaeological site in central China is reshaping long-held assumptions about early hominin behavior in ...
The earliest known hand-held wooden tools have been uncovered by researchers at an archeological site in Greece.
Researchers identified early handled tools that archeologists previously thought were not created in East Asia until ...
Learn how archaeologists dated stone tools from central China and what they reveal about when early humans in Asia began using complex tools.
11don MSN
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.
Stone tools from central China dated to 160,000 years ago show early hafting, planning and skill, reshaping views of East ...
The finding, along with the discovery of a 500,000-year-old hammer made of bone, indicates that our human ancestors were ...
When Japanese scientists wanted to learn more about how ground stone tools dating back to the Early Upper Paleolithic might have been used, they decided to build their own replicas of adzes, axes, and ...
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