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March 5, 2025

Standardized production of bone tools by our ancestors pushed back 1 million years

Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC
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Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC

Twenty-seven standardized bone tools dating back more than 1.5 million years were recently discovered in the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania by a team of scientists from the CNRS and l'Université de Bordeaux, in collaboration with international and Tanzanian researchers.

The study was in the journal Nature.

This discovery challenges our understanding of early hominin technological evolution, as the oldest previously known standardized date back approximately 500,000 years.

Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC
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Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC
Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC
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Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC

During these excavations, the researchers identified tools shaped on-site from hippopotamus bones within the same geological layer. More surprisingly, they also found elephant bones that had been transported to the site as either tools or raw materials for tool-making.

This behavior suggests an early ability for planning and the transmission of know-how among these ancient populations.

These results were obtained via an approach combining and experimental archaeology.

Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC
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Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC
Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC
× close
Bone tools found in Olduvai, photographed in the Pleistocene Archaeology Lab of CSIC. Credit: CSIC

More information: Esther García Pastor, Systematic bone tool production at 1.5 million years ago, Nature (2025). .

Journal information: Nature

Provided by CNRS

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The discovery of 27 standardized bone tools in Tanzania's Olduvai Gorge, dating back over 1.5 million years, significantly revises the timeline of early hominin technological development. Previously, the oldest known standardized bone tools were about 500,000 years old. The tools, crafted from hippopotamus bones and possibly transported elephant bones, indicate early planning and knowledge transmission among ancient populations.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.