The study found that early humans passed down tool-making skills for hundreds of thousands of years in Kenya as their climate ...
Archaeologists uncovered 150,000-year-old tools in Morocco’s Bizmoune Cave, revealing how early humans hunted and lived.
Ailsa Chang speaks with David Braun, an archeologist, about his team's discovery of a site in Kenya that suggests human ancestors built tools continuously much earlier than previously thought.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Early humans started making and using tools 2.75 million years ago
Long before cities or farms, the earliest humans were standing in a changing northern Kenyan landscape, striking stone to ...
We may be witnessing the moment when our ancestors first defied a hostile world, using the same tools in the same place for ...
A Kenyan site reveals early humans made and used the same Oldowan stone tools for 300,000 years, showing remarkable stability ...
IFLScience on MSN
Oldowan Tools Saw Early Humans Through 300,000 Years Of Fire, Drought, And Shifting Climates, New Site Reveals
A new site in one of the most important basins for humanity’s evolution has provided evidence of occupation over an ...
ZME Science on MSN
These 2.75-Million-Year-Old Stone Tools Prove Humans Were Born to Invent
Long before the first sparks of civilization — or even humanity as we know it — our ancestors were already inventors. On the ...
Imagine early humans meticulously crafting stone tools for nearly 300,000 years, all while contending with recurring ...
Oldowan stone tools made from a variety of raw materials sourced more than 6 miles away from where they were found in southwestern Kenya. The development of the Oldowan toolkit made it possible for ...
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