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Tuesday, November 18, 2008 - 11:41 AM
Large stone-cutting tools dubbed hand axes regularly appear at
prehistoric archaeological sites from India westward across southern
Asia into Europe and Africa. In 1944, Harvard anthropologist Hallam L.
Movius Jr. proposed that those prehistoric populations, living 1.6
million to 200,000 years ago, existed on one side of a geographical
line that separated them from groups in central and eastern Asia, where
early humans fashioned much simpler stone implements. Now, the
discovery of ancient hand axes in southern China's Bose basin supports
the growing suspicion that hand ax production sometimes crossed what
archaeologists call the Movius line. The 800,000-year-old Asian tools
look much like Stone Age hand axes from anywhere else, concludes a team
led by Hou Yamei of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing and
Richard Potts of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of
Natural History in Washington, D.C. Other new evidence gathered
by the scientists suggests that an ancient meteorite destroyed forests
in southern China and temporarily exposed rocky outcrops in the Bose
basin. Human ancestors, either longtime residents or recent arrivals to
the region, then had access to large clumps of rock that they could
hammer and chip into hand-held axes, the researchers hold. "Our
work suggests that evidence for cultural differences doesn't occur in
early human behavior," Potts asserts. "Given a particular kind of open
environment, human ancestors everywhere produced the same kinds of
stone tools for hundreds of thousands of years." Yamei, Potts,
and their colleagues analyzed 991 stone artifacts found at 24 sites in
the Bose basin. This collection includes 35 pear-shaped hand axes
featuring two sharpened edges running up opposite sides above a rounded
base. The researchers describe their discoveries in the March 3 Science.
They also report that sediment at the three excavation sites that
yielded the tools contains rocks that had undergone intense heating.
Laboratory analysis of argon isotopes in the rocks from Bose dated the
heating to about 803,000 years ago. The scientists suspect that
the heated rocks resulted from a meteorite's impact or its explosion in
Earth's atmosphere in the vicinity of Indonesia at around the same
time. Independent examinations of ocean cores have documented such an
occurrence. Increasing evidence from the Bose basin and sediment
beneath the South China Sea suggests that the region fluctuated from
drier to wetter conditions for much of the Stone Age, Potts asserts. In
his view, this suggests that periodic access to rock sources in drier
times, when there was less vegetation, encouraged hand ax production
among the region's longtime residents. The discovery of the Bose
hand axes "implies similar technical, cultural, and cognitive
capabilities on both sides of the Movius line," Potts says. The
Bose axes resemble those from elsewhere without slavishly duplicating
them, comments anthropologist F. Clark Howell of the University of
California, Berkeley. Like Potts, Howell suspects that Homo erectus groups living in Asia developed their own traditions of hand ax production when suitable rock became available. Stanley
H. Ambrose, an archaeologist at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, disagrees. The double-edged Bose tools are
indistinguishable from those in Africa and southern Asia, he contends. http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com/
"You
could lose the Bose stuff in the [stone artifacts] from Africa that we
have in our university collection," Ambrose maintains. http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com/
Widespread forest destruction caused by the ancient meteorite event probably spurred H. erectus groups in India to migrate into eastern Asia, where they made the Bose hand axes, he proposes. Some
more western population must have brought an established hand ax
tradition to eastern Asia, concurs archaeologist Ofer Bar-Yosef of
Harvard University. For the bulk of the Stone Age, ancestral peoples
rigidly adhered to toolmaking styles dictated by cultural conventions,
not the type or amount of rock available, Bar-Yosef argues. For instance, some European Stone Age sites contain good rock for hand axes but yield only simpler stone flakes, he notes. "The Bose finds are an exception," Bar-Yosef says. "They don't destroy the Movius line." Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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