🤖 AI Summary
ヨーロッパの初期ホミニンが、**約43万年前にギリシャ南部で**木製工具、**約50万年前にイングランド南部で象(またはマンモス)骨のハンマー**を作っていたことが、2つの新研究で明らかになった。いずれも炭鉱遺跡から出土し、製作者は初期ネアンデルタール人かそれ以前の**ホモ・ハイデルベルゲンシス**と考えられる。これらはヒト科の高度な技術と認知能力が、**ホモ・サピエンスがヨーロッパに到来する300千年前よりはるか以前に**すでに存在していたことを示す最古の木製工具記録である。
Early hominins in Europe were creating tools from raw materials hundreds of thousands of years before Homo sapiens arrived there, two new studies indicate, pushing back the established time for such activity. From a report: The evidence includes a 500,000-year-old hammer made of elephant or mammoth bone, excavated in southern England, and 430,000-year-old wooden tools found in southern Greece -- the earliest wooden tools on record.
The findings suggest that early humans possessed sophisticated technological skills, the researchers said. Katerina Harvati, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Tubingen in Germany and a lead author of the wooden-tool paper, which was published on Monday in the journal PNAS, said the discoveries provided insight into the prehistoric origins of human intelligence. Silvia Bello, a paleoanthropologist at London's Natural History Museum and an author on the elephant-bone study, which was published last week in Science Advances, concurred.
The artifacts in both studies, recovered from coal-mine sites, were probably produced by early Neanderthals or a preceding species, Homo heidelbergensis. Homo sapiens emerged in Africa more than 300,000 years ago, and the oldest evidence of them in Europe is a 210,000-year-old fossil unearthed in Greece. By the time Homo sapiens established themselves in Britain 40,000 years ago, other hominins had already lived there for nearly a million years.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.