The oldest known stone tools, dating to long before the emergence of modern humans, have been discovered in Africa.
The roughly-hewn stones, which are around 3.3 million years old, have been hailed by scientists as a “new beginning to the known archaeological record” and push back the dawn of culture by 700,000 years.
The discovery overturns the mainstream view that the ability to make stone tools was unique to our own ancestors and that it was one of a handful of traits that made early humans so special.
The new artefacts, found in Kenya’s Turkana basin, suggest that a variety ancient apes were making similar advances in parallel across the African continent.
“It just rewrites the book on a lot of things that we thought were true,” said Chris Lepre, a geologist at the […]