sábado, 27 de enero de 2024

Researchers find evidence of an advanced material culture 45,000 years ago

 The geographic expansion of Homo sapiens populations into southeastern Europe occurred by 47,000 years ago (47 ka), marked by Initial Upper Palaeolithic (IUP) technology. H. sapiens was present in western Siberia by 45 ka, and IUP industries indicate early entries by 50 ka in the Russian Altai and 46–45 ka in northern Mongolia. H. sapiens was in northeastern Asia by 40 ka, with a single IUP site in China dating to 43–41 ka. Here we describe an IUP assemblage from Shiyu in northern China, dating to 45 ka. Shiyu contains a stone tool assemblage produced by Levallois and Volumetric Blade Reduction methods, the long-distance transfer of obsidian from sources in China and the Russian Far East (800–1,000 km away), increased hunting skills denoted by the selective culling of adult equids and the recovery of tanged and hafted projectile points with evidence of impact fractures, and the presence of a worked bone tool and a shaped graphite disc. Shiyu exhibits a set of advanced cultural behaviours, and together with the recovery of a now-lost human cranial bone, the record supports an expansion of H. sapiens into eastern Asia by about 45 ka.

Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-023-02294-4