Hunter-Gatherer Culture 20,000 Years Older Than Previously Thought

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Recent findings from the Border Cave in South Africa indicate that hunter-gatherer cultures may have emerged 20,000 years earlier than previously thought, with artefacts dated to 44,000 years ago. This research, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, highlights advancements in what is considered the Later Stone Age, coinciding with the first human migrations from Africa to Europe. The study examined items associated with the San people, including beads made from ostrich eggshell, bone arrowheads, and beeswax, suggesting sophisticated tool-making practices. Additionally, technological analyses reveal that specialized bone tools, previously attributed to later periods, were in use at least 30,000 years earlier than known, further pushing back the timeline of human technological development.
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POISON darts and beeswax have been found in a South African cave, suggesting that a hunter-gatherer culture emerged 20,000 years earlier than previously thought.

Artefacts at the Border Cave, an archaeological site on the border of Kwa Zulu Natal and Swaziland, have been reanalysed and dated to 44,000 years ago, about twice as old as widely believed, said the research in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

These signs of advancement, signalling perhaps the oldest traces of modern culture in what is known as the Later Stone Age, would coincide with the first known migration of humans from Africa to Europe, said the US-published study.

The research focused on items left by what are known as the San people, including ostrich eggshell beads, bone arrowhead points, wooden digging sticks, warthog tusks and beeswax likely used for making tools...

Unbelievable difference:

"...dated to 44,000 years ago, about twice as old as widely believed..."
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Maybe that it's about this publication, but that's 30,000 years earlier.

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305440312000556

Technological and use-wear analysis of these objects, and their comparison with experimental and ethnographic data, reveals that a number of specialised bone tool types (wedges, pièces esquillées, pressure flakers, smoothers, sequentially notched pieces), previously known only from the Upper Palaeolithic and more recent periods, were manufactured and used at least 30,000 years earlier at Sibudu Cave.
 
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