1.9-million- and 2.4-million-year-old artifacts and stone tool-cutmarked bones from Ain Boucherit, Algeria
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Pares, Josep M
Duval, Mathieu
Caceres, Isabel
Harichane, Zoheir
van der Made, Jan
Perez-Gonzalez, Alfredo
Abdessadok, Salah
Kandi, Nadia
Derradji, Abdelkader
Medig, Mohamed
Boulaghraif, Kamel
Semaw, Sileshi
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Abstract
East Africa has provided the earliest known evidence for Oldowan stone artifacts and hominin-induced stone tool cutmarks dated to ~2.6 million years (Ma) ago. The ~1.8-million-year-old stone artifacts from Ain Hanech (Algeria) were considered to represent the oldest archaeological materials in North Africa. Here we report older stone artifacts and cutmarked bones excavated from two nearby deposits at Ain Boucherit estimated to ~1.9 Ma ago, and the older to ~2.4 Ma ago. Hence, the Ain Boucherit evidence shows that ancestral hominins inhabited the Mediterranean fringe in northern Africa much earlier than previously thought. The evidence strongly argues for early dispersal of stone tool manufacture and use from East Africa or a possible multiple-origin scenario of stone technology in both East and North Africa.
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SCIENCE
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362
Issue
6420
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© 2018 SCIENCE. The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
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Archaeology