4.3 Article

Bone tools from Beds II-IV, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, and implications for the origins and evolution of bone technology

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
Volume 148, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102885

Keywords

Osseous technology; Earliest barbed point; Homo erectus; Taphonomy; Early Stone Age

Funding

  1. Tanzanian Antiquities Department
  2. Commission for Science and Technology
  3. Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority
  4. Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research [7640, 9245]
  5. European Research Council (European Union's Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007-2013]/ERC grant) [283366]
  6. Rutgers University Center for Human Evolutionary Studies
  7. European Research Council-Advanced Grant (BICAEHFID) [832980]
  8. Research Council of Norway through its Centre of Excellence funding scheme (SFF Centre for Early Sapiens Behaviour - SapienCE) [262618]
  9. Talents program of the University of Bordeaux 'Initiative d'Excellence'
  10. European Research Council (ERC) [832980] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The advent of bone technology in Africa is often associated with behavioral modernity that began sometime in the Middle Stone Age. Yet, small numbers of bone tools are known from Early Pleistocene sites in East and South Africa, complicating our understanding of the evolutionary significance of osseous technologies. These early bone tools vary geographically, with those in South Africa indicating use in foraging activities such as termite extraction and those in East Africa intentionally shaped in a manner similar to lithic tool manufacture, leading some to infer multiple hominin species were responsible for bone technology in these regions, with Paranthropus robustus assumed to be the maker of South African bone tools and Homo erectus responsible for those in East Africa. Here, we present on an assemblage of 52 supposed bone tools primarily from Beds III and IV, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, that was excavated by Mary Leakey in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but was only partially published and was never studied in detail from a taphonomic perspective. The majority of the sites from which the tools were recovered were deposited when only H. erectus is known to have existed in the region, potentially allowing a direct link between this fossil hominin and bone technology. Our analysis confirms at least six bone tools in the assemblage, the majority of which are intentionally flaked large mammal bones. However, one of the tools is a preform of the oldest barbed bone point known to exist anywhere in the world and pushes back the initial appearance of this technology by 700 kyr. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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