Zambia find shows humans have built with wood for 476,000 years
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[September 21, 2023]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - Along the banks of the Kalambo River in Zambia near Africa's
second-highest waterfall, archaeologists have excavated two logs of the
large-fruited bushwillow tree that were notched, shaped and joined
nearly half a million years ago.
These artifacts, researchers said on Wednesday, represent the
oldest-known example of humans - in this case a species that preceded
our own - building wooden structures, a milestone in technological
achievement that indicates that our forerunners displayed more ingenuity
than previously thought.
The logs, modified using stone tools, appear to have been part of a
framework for a structure, a conclusion that contradicts the notion
humans at that time simply roamed the landscape hunting and gathering
resources.
"The framework could have supported a walkway or platform raised above
the seasonally wet surroundings. A platform could have multiple purposes
including storage of firewood, tools, food and as a foundation on which
to place a hut," said archaeologist Larry Barham of the University of
Liverpool in England, lead author of the study published in the journal
Nature.
"Not only did the working of trees require considerable skill, the right
tools and planning, the effort involved suggests that the makers were
staying in the location for extended periods whereas we have always had
a model of Stone Age people as nomadic," Barham added.
The rarity of wood preservation at early archaeological sites - it is
perishable over time - means scientists have little understanding of how
early humans used it.
"While the vast majority of archaeological sites of this age preserve
only the stone tools, Kalambo Falls provides us a unique insight into
the wooden objects that these tools were being used to create, allowing
us a much richer and more complete picture of the lives of these
people," said geographer and study co-author Geoff Duller of Aberystwyth
University in Wales.
"Wood can be shaped into a variety of forms making it an excellent
construction material that is strong and durable," Barham added.
The earliest-known Homo sapiens fossils date from roughly 300,000 years
ago in Morocco. The Kalambo Falls logs were determined to be from about
476,000 years ago.
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Researchers uncover a wooden structure on the banks of the Kalambo
River in Zambia that represents the oldest-known use of wood in
construction in this undated handout image taken in August 2019.
Larry Barham/University of Liverpool/Handout via REUTERS/File photo
No human remains were found there, but Barham suspects the artifacts
were fashioned by a species called Homo heidelbergensis known from
about 700,000 to 200,000 years ago. Homo heidelbergensis possessed a
large browridge and a bigger braincase and flatter face than earlier
hominins - species on the human evolutionary lineage.
The overlying log at Kalambo Falls is about 4-1/2 feet (1.4 meters)
long, with tapering ends. About 5 feet (1.5 meters) of the
underlying log was excavated.
"The structure involves the intentional shaping of two trees to
create a framework of two interlocking supports. A notch was cut
into the overlying log and the underlying tree was shaped to fit
through the notch. This arrangement prevents the overlying log from
moving side to side, giving stability to the structure," Barham
said.
The wood, found in a waterlogged condition, was preserved by a
permanent high-water table at the site. Clay sediments surrounding
it provided an oxygen-free environment preventing decay.
The earliest-known wood artifact is a plank fragment from Israel,
about 780,000 years old. Wooden tools for foraging and hunting are
known from about 400,000 years ago. A wedge-shaped wooden tool about
as old as the logs was found at Kalambo Falls.
The site, about a quarter mile (400 meters) upriver from a
spectacular 770-foot (235-meter) high waterfall, was discovered in
1953, but its age remained unclear. The new study used a method
called luminescence dating, measuring the amount of energy an object
has trapped since it was buried.
"The finds from Kalambo Falls indicate that these hominins, like
Homo sapiens, had the capacity to alter their surroundings, creating
a built environment," Barham said. "Use of wood in this way suggests
the cognitive ability to these early humans was greater than we have
believed based on stone tools alone."
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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