Before hominins intentionally chipped stone to make tools, they likely used sharp rocks already shaped by natural forces.
Sharp stone technology chipped over three million years allowed early humans to exploit animal and plant food resources. But how did the production of stone tools -- called 'knapping' -- start?
According to a report by The Baltimore Banner, a team of volunteers and archaeologists from the Maryland Historical Trust ...
For one Otago researcher, a decades-old archaeological project studying eleven tonnes of artefacts from Tiwai Point – ...
In a discovery reshaping the understanding of prehistoric cultures in Eurasia, archaeologists found an 8,400-year-old stone human figurine in Damjili Cave, located in the limestone hills of western ...
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