Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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weatheriscool
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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Early Neolithic high mountain settlers were already carrying out complex livestock and farming activities, finds study
https://phys.org/news/2023-12-early-neo ... tlers.html
by Autonomous University of Barcelona
An archaeological find in the Huescan Pyrenees allowed researchers to identify for the first time livestock management strategies and feeding practices that demonstrate how the first high mountain societies at the start of the Neolithic period were already carrying out complex livestock and farming activities, instead of being limited to the transhumance of sheep and goats.

The study, published in Frontiers in Environmental Archaeology, is the first to combine carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis with archaeozoological analyses. The study, coordinated by the UAB and including the involvement of the CSIC, the University of Évora and the Government of Aragon, also documented how the economic importance of pigs in the Huescan region dates back to the Neolithic.

The research on management strategies and use of animal resources in high mountain areas during the Early Neolithic, approximately 6,500 to 7,500 years ago, was conditioned by the presumption that human occupancy of these regions were mainly seasonal and that economic practices focused greatly on making use of wild resources.

With regard to livestock rearing, the role of sheep and goat transhumance in high mountain areas has stood out traditionally, while only a marginal role has been given to other livestock activities, in which the temporary maintenance of these animal flocks has been highlighted
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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Shiyu discovery reveals East Asia's advanced material culture dating to 45,000 years ago
https://phys.org/news/2024-01-shiyu-dis ... -asia.html
by Chinese Academy of Sciences
A team of researchers from China, Australia, France, Spain, and Germany has revealed advanced material culture in East Asia dating to 45,000 years ago. The new study is published in Nature Ecology & Evolution.

The researchers examined a previously excavated archaeological collection from the Shiyu site, located in Shanxi Province.

"Our new study identified an Initial Upper Paleolithic archaeological assemblage from the Shiyu site of North China dating to 45,000 years ago that includes blade technology, tanged and hafted projectile points, long-distance obsidian transfer, and the use of a perforated graphite disk," said associate Prof. Yang Shixia, first and corresponding author of the study and a researcher at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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weatheriscool wrote: Thu Jan 18, 2024 12:06 pm Shiyu discovery reveals East Asia's advanced material culture dating to 45,000 years ago
https://phys.org/news/2024-01-shiyu-dis ... -asia.html
by Chinese Academy of Sciences
A team of researchers from China, Australia, France, Spain, and Germany has revealed advanced material culture in East Asia dating to 45,000 years ago. The new study is published in Nature Ecology & Evolution.

The researchers examined a previously excavated archaeological collection from the Shiyu site, located in Shanxi Province.

"Our new study identified an Initial Upper Paleolithic archaeological assemblage from the Shiyu site of North China dating to 45,000 years ago that includes blade technology, tanged and hafted projectile points, long-distance obsidian transfer, and the use of a perforated graphite disk," said associate Prof. Yang Shixia, first and corresponding author of the study and a researcher at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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90,000-year-old human footprints found on Moroccan beach
https://phys.org/news/2024-01-year-huma ... beach.html
by Bob Yirka , Phys.org

An international team of archaeologists has found and identified a trackway made by multiple humans approximately 90,000 years ago in what is now Morocco. In their paper published in the journal Scientific Reports, the group describes how they tested for its origins of the tracks.

Finding footprints left behind by people thousands of years ago is extremely rare due to their generally ephemeral nature. Still, occasionally, events will transpire to preserve footprints, such as encasement in sediment that hardens. Such prints can then over time be revealed as the material that once hid them erodes away. In this instance, the footprints were found in a sandy tract on a rocky part of the Moroccan shoreline.

As is often the case with archaeological finds, the tracks were found by accident. The research team happened to be in the area studying boulders near the ocean when they noticed an indentation in a nearby stretch of sand. A closer look revealed more indentations, which turned out be human footprints.
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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Bones Prove Homo Sapiens Came to Northern Europe Earlier Than Thought
Anatomically modern humans reached northern central and northwestern Europe 5,000 years earlier than previously believed.
By Adrianna Nine February 2, 2024
Shards of bone found in a German cave are transforming anthropologists’ understanding of our species’ earliest ancestors. Previously thought to have made their way to northern Europe around 38,000 BCE, the bones show that Homo sapiens reached the area 5,000 to 7,500 years sooner. Though the bones were found a few years ago, recent stable isotope analyses confirm the fragments’ age and definitively link them to Homo sapiens.

Up until now, anthropologists believed Homo sapiens made their way to northern central and northwestern Europe about 40,000 years ago. Long after evolving in Africa 300,000 years ago, Homo sapiens were thought to make their way around Earth and encounter other early humans—like Neanderthals—in parts of Europe and Asia. But Europe’s cold upper regions weren’t believed to have been explored by Homo sapiens until much later.
https://www.extremetech.com/science/bon ... an-thought
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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Hunter-gatherers were violently wiped off the map by farmers, DNA reveals
By Bronwyn Thompson
February 12, 2024
https://newatlas.com/biology/first-farm ... gatherers/
Contrary to what has long been believed, there was no peaceful transition of power from hunter-gather societies to farming communities in Europe, with new advanced DNA analysis revealing that the newcomers slaughtered the existing population, completely wiping them out within a few generations.

Researchers from Sweden's Lund University analyzed skeletons and teeth found in what is now Denmark, and found that 5,900 years ago, the region underwent a swift and total population change. Prior to this, Danish Mesolithic people of the Maglemose, Kongemose and Ertebølle cultures – genetically related to other Western European hunter-gatherers – were prominent inhabitants. But when Neolithic farmers arrived, an abrupt shift can be seen in DNA records, with next to no genetic contribution from the local hunter-gatherers.

Tracing the DNA timeline, the researchers could see that the hunter-gatherers had been swiftly wiped out by the late Stone Age, in what they suspect was a very bloody and very thorough takeover.
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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^^^ They went the way of Neanderthals and I mean that seriously.
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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Scientists Identify a Universal Optimal Temperature For Life on Earth
20 February 2024

Have you ever wondered about the optimal temperature for life on Earth? For humans, 20°C is comfortable. Any warmer and we work less efficiently because releasing heat requires energy.

We know many species can live at much colder or warmer temperatures than humans. But our systematic review of published research found the thermal ranges of animals, plants and microbes living in air and water overlap at 20°C. Could this be a coincidence?

For all species, the relationship with temperature is an asymmetric bell-shaped curve. This means biological processes increase in line with temperature, reach a maximum, and then rapidly decline when it gets too hot.

Recently, a New Zealand research group noticed the number of marine species did not peak at the equator, as has been commonly assumed. Rather, the number dipped, with peaks in the subtropics.

Follow-up studies showed this dip has been getting deeper since the last ice age about 20,000 years ago. And it has been deepening faster due to global ocean warming.
https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists ... e-on-earth
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Re: Human Prehistory (3.3 million years BC – 3500 BC)

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Ingenious Neanderthals had glue as part of their prehistoric tool kits
By Michael Franco
February 22, 2024
https://newatlas.com/science/neanderthals-glue-tools/

Neanderthals were gluing handles onto their tools over 100,000 years ago, possibly making the species even smarter than previously thought. So says a new study that discovered the use of adhesives on ancient stone tools that were previously overlooked.

The finding came after a team of researchers examined stone tools that had been wrapped up and largely forgotten since the 1960s at Berlin’s Museum of Prehistory and Early History. The fact that the tools had been well-stored enabled the researchers to find traces of bitumen on them when they were examined. Bitumen is a sticky substance used in asphalt. It can be made from crude oil but it is also found occurring naturally in the ground.

The location of the bitumen residue led the researchers to believe that the substance formed a handle that would have made the tools easier to hold and use.

"The tools showed two kinds of microscopic wear: one is the typical polish on the sharp edges that is generally caused by working other materials," said Radu Iovita, an associate professor at New York University’s Center for the Study of Human Origins. "The other is a bright polish distributed all over the presumed hand-held part, but not elsewhere, which we interpreted as the results of abrasion from the ocher due to movement of the tool within the grip." Iovita is the co-author of a study detailing the find that's been published in the journal Science Advances.
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