| Literature DB >> 25993961 |
Sonia Harmand1, Jason E Lewis2, Craig S Feibel3, Christopher J Lepre4, Sandrine Prat5, Arnaud Lenoble6, Xavier Boës5, Rhonda L Quinn7, Michel Brenet8, Adrian Arroyo9, Nicholas Taylor10, Sophie Clément11, Guillaume Daver12, Jean-Philip Brugal13, Louise Leakey14, Richard A Mortlock15, James D Wright15, Sammy Lokorodi16, Christopher Kirwa17, Dennis V Kent18, Hélène Roche10.
Abstract
Human evolutionary scholars have long supposed that the earliest stone tools were made by the genus Homo and that this technological development was directly linked to climate change and the spread of savannah grasslands. New fieldwork in West Turkana, Kenya, has identified evidence of much earlier hominin technological behaviour. We report the discovery of Lomekwi 3, a 3.3-million-year-old archaeological site where in situ stone artefacts occur in spatiotemporal association with Pliocene hominin fossils in a wooded palaeoenvironment. The Lomekwi 3 knappers, with a developing understanding of stone's fracture properties, combined core reduction with battering activities. Given the implications of the Lomekwi 3 assemblage for models aiming to converge environmental change, hominin evolution and technological origins, we propose for it the name 'Lomekwian', which predates the Oldowan by 700,000 years and marks a new beginning to the known archaeological record.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25993961 DOI: 10.1038/nature14464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962