While early human ancestors started making stone tools at least 2.6 million years ago, bone tools took much longer to appear.
A cache of 1.5 million-year-old bone tools uncovered in Tanzania suggest ancient human ancestors were capable of critical ...
Human ancestors making 'bone tech' 1.5 million years ago, say scientists Our ancestors were making tools out of bones 1.5 million years ago, winding back the clock for this important moment in human ...
The development of tool technology is considered a pivotal step in human evolution. Deliberately shaped stones are thought to ...
The handcrafted tools found in Tanzania were made 1.5 million years ago and were fashioned primarily from the bones of ...
New evidence uncovered in east Africa indicates ancient hominins began crafting tools from animal bones far earlier than ...
The oldest human-crafted bone tools on record are 1.5 million years old, a finding that suggests our ancestors were much ...
The bone tools date from more than a million years before our species, Homo sapiens, arose around 300,000 years ago.
An assemblage of tools found in Tanzania that was fashioned about 1.5 million years ago from the limb bones of elephants and ...
Now, researchers have uncovered a substantial cache of prehistoric bone tools in the same region dating back 1.5 million years. It's the oldest collection of mass-produced bone tools yet known, ...
Before this discovery in Tanzania’s Olduvai Gorge, in which CENIEH participated, researchers believed that hominins only ...