Earliest Homo sapiens exhibited
unexpected sophistication
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[March 16, 2018]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - On a grassy African
landscape, some of the earliest members of our species, Homo sapiens,
engaged in surprisingly sophisticated behaviors including using color
pigments, creating advanced tools and trading for resources with other
groups of people.
Those findings were reported on Thursday by scientists who examined
artifacts dating from 320,000 years ago unearthed in southern Kenya,
roughly the same age as the earliest-known Homo sapiens fossils
discovered elsewhere in Africa.
The researchers described ochre pigment that produced a bright-red
color, which could have been used for body painting or other symbolic
expression, and tools fashioned from obsidian, a volcanic rock that
yields extremely sharp blades, that contrasted with clunkier ones used
by earlier species in the human evolutionary lineage.
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The researchers found abundant evidence of long-distance transfer of
obsidian to the Olorgesailie Basin location from sites up to 55 miles
(88 km) away over rugged terrain, leading them to believe it was
acquired from another group through trade although it was unknown what
was provided in exchange.
The findings indicate advances in technology and social structures
unexpected so early in our species' history, they said.
"My view is that these newly evolved mental and social abilities --
including awareness of distant groups, use of pigments and innovative
technologies including projectile points -- were at the foundation of
our species' origin," said paleoanthropologist Rick Potts, director of
the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's Human Origins
Program.
"They may have actually been the behaviors that distinguished our
lineage/gene pool from other early human species."
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Smithsonian researchers are seen at the Olorgesailie Basin
excavation site where red ocher pigments were found with Middle
Stone Age artifacts, in southern Kenya in this undated handout
photograph released on March 15, 2018. Courtesy Human Origins
Program, Smithsonian/Handout via REUTERS
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The team discovered pigment materials, a dark brownish color from
manganese and bright red from ochre.
"The choice of importing the ochre from a distance rather than using
a more common local material which accomplishes the same purpose
argues that having a red face or hair or clothing or weapons also
carried a symbolic message of some sort," said paleoanthropologist
Alison Brooks of George Washington University and the museum's Human
Origins Program.
The researchers described obsidian tools that were smaller, more
carefully crafted and more specialized than larger stone tools
called handaxes used by earlier human species.
The obsidian was used in a wide range of tools including scrapers,
implements with chisel and gouging edges and also in small points
that could be placed at the end of a wood or bone shaft for use as a
projectile weapon.
The research was published in the journal Science.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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