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Live Science on MSNOldest wooden tools unearthed in East Asia show that ancient humans made planned trips to dig up edible plantsThe 300,000 year-old tools show that hominins in East Asia made planned foraging trips to lakeshores and designed instruments ...
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Ancient wooden tools found at a site in Gantangqing in southwestern China are approximately 300,000 years old, new dating has ...
A new study uncovers how early humans in Greece used stone tools for butchery, offering rare insight into life 430,000 years ...
A trove of rare 300,000-year-old wooden tools unearthed in south-west China reveals that early humans in the region may have relied heavily on underground plants like roots and tubers for sustenance.
Newly uncovered wooden tools from Pleistocene China reveal complex, plant-focused technology far earlier than expected in East Asia. Researchers working at the Pleistocene-era Gantangqing site in ...
A team of Chinese scientists has discovered wooden tools in Yunnan province dating back approximately 300,000 years, shedding ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSN361,000-year-old discovery in China: Oldest wooden tools shake up archaeologyResearchers in China unveil the oldest complex wooden technology, pushing back the timeline for sophisticated tool use.
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The Brighterside of News on MSNEarly humans started to produce standardized bone tools 1.5 million years ago - MSNFor millions of years, early human ancestors relied on stone tools to shape their world. The discovery of a collection of 27 ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN3d
Ancient Wooden Tools in China Rewrite the Story of Early Human Ingenuity and DietThe tools show a level of planning and craftsmanship that challenges the notion that East Asian hominins were technologically ...
Europe’s earliest known boomerang, carved from mammoth tusk and over 40,000 years old, reveals advanced skills of early Homo ...
New discoveries from the Pleistocene-age Gantangqing site in southwestern China reveal a diverse collection of wooden tools dated from ~361,000 to ...
Archaeologists have uncovered 80,000-year-old stone tools at Jebel Faya in Sharjah, providing groundbreaking evidence of sophisticated early human activity in the Arabian Peninsula and revealing a ...
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