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LECTURE 5: USING TOOLS IN PREHISTORY
Using tools has been interpreted as a sign of intelligence, and it has been
theorized that tool use may have stimulated certain aspects of human evolution -
most notably the continued expansion of the human brain. Paleontology has yet to explain the expansion of
this organ over millions of years despite being extremely demanding in terms of
energy consumption. The brain of a modern human consumes about 20 Watts (400 kilocalories per day), which is one fifth of
the energy consumption of a human body. Increased tool use would allow for
hunting and consuming meat, which is more energy-rich than plants. Researchers
have suggested that early hominids were thus under evolutionary pressure to
increase their capacity to create and use tools.[29]
Precisely when early humans started to use tools is difficult to determine,
because the more primitive these tools are (for example, sharp-edged stones) the
more difficult it is to decide whether they are natural objects or human
artifacts. There is some evidence that the australopithecines (4 mya) may have
used broken bones as tools, but this is debated.
Stone tools are first attested around 2.6 million years ago, when H.
habilis in Eastern Africa used so-called pebble tools, choppers made out of round pebbles
that had been split by simple strikes.[30]
This marks the beginning of the Paleolithic, or Old Stone Age; its end is taken to
be the end of the last Ice Age, around 10,000 years ago. The Paleolithic is
subdivided into the Lower Paleolithic (Early Stone Age, ending
around 350,000–300,000 years ago), the Middle Paleolithic (Middle Stone Age, until
50,000–30,000 years ago), and the Upper Paleolithic.
The period from 700,000–300,000 years ago is also known as the Acheulean, when H. ergaster
(or erectus) made large stone hand-axes out of flint and quartzite, at first quite rough (Early Acheulian),
later "retouched" by additional, more
subtle strikes at the sides of the flakes. After 350,000 BP (Before Present) the more
refined so-called Levallois technique was developed. It
consisted of a series of consecutive strikes, by which scrapers, slicers
("racloirs"), needles, and flattened needles were made.[30]
Finally, after about 50,000 BP, ever more refined and specialized flint tools
were made by the Neanderthals and the immigrant Cro-Magnons (knives, blades, skimmers). In this
period they also started to make tools out of bone.
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