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How we discovered the oldest human burial in Africa – and what it tells us about our ancestors


How did human uniqueness first evolve among our ancestors, setting us apart from other animals? That is a question many archaeologists are grappling with by investigating early records of art, language, food preparation, ornaments and symbols. How our ancestors treated and mourned the dead can also offer crucial clues, helping to reveal when we first developed the abstract thinking needed to fully grasp the concept of death.
Now we have discovered a 78,000-year-old human burial at a cave in the tropical coast of eastern Africa, which provides tantalising evidence about our ancestors’ treatment of the dead. Our new study, published in Nature, describes the burial of a 2½ to 3-year-old child, nicknamed “Mtoto” (Swahili for “child”), at the Panga ya Saidi archaeological site in Kenya. It is the earliest known ....

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Ostrich eggshells hold clues to our earliest ancestors


The shells of ostrich eggs offer a timeline for some of the earliest
Homo sapiens who settled down to utilize marine food resources along the South African coast more than 100,000 years ago.
Archeologists have learned a lot about our ancestors by rummaging through their garbage piles, which contain evidence of their diet and population levels as the local flora and fauna changed over time.
One common kitchen scrap in Africa the shells of ostrich eggs is now helping unscramble the mystery of when these changes took place.
Geochronologists at the University of California, Berkeley, and the Berkeley Geochronology Center (BGC) have developed a technique that uses these ubiquitous discards to precisely date garbage dumps politely called middens that are too old to be dated by radiocarbon or carbon-14 techniques, the standard for materials like bone and wood that are younger than about 50,000 years. ....

Western Cape , South Africa , United States , Cape Town , California Institute Of Technology , South African , Elizabeth Niespolo , Graham Avery , Todd Dawson , Iziko South African Museum , University Of California , Princeton University , National Science Foundation , Leakey Foundation , Gordon Getty Foundation , Proceedings Of The National Academy Sciences , Berkeley Geochronology Center , National Academy , Warren Sharp , Middle Stone Age , Iziko South African , Sea Harvest , Western Cape Province , Later Stone Age , Middle East , California Institute ,

A West African Window Into Human Evolution


and has been republished under Creative Commons.
Our species, 
Homo
sapiens, rose in Africa some 300,000 years ago. The objects that early humans made and used, known as the Middle Stone Age material culture, are found throughout much of Africa and include a vast range of innovations.
Among them are bow and arrow technology, specialized tool forms, the long-distance transport of objects such as marine shells and obsidian, personal ornamentation, the use of pigments, water storage, and art. Although it is possible that other ancestors of modern humans contributed to this material culture in Africa, some of the earliest Middle Stone Age stone tools have been found with the oldest ....

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Discarded ostrich shells provide timeline for our early African ancestors


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IMAGE: Ancient ostrich eggshells from Ysterfontein 1, a Middle Stone Age midden in South Africa. Shown are selected eggshells from the top layer of the midden dated by Uranium-Thorium (U-Th, or.
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Credit: Image courtesy of E. Niespolo.
Archeologists have learned a lot about our ancestors by rummaging through their garbage piles, which contain evidence of their diet and population levels as the local flora and fauna changed over time.
One common kitchen scrap in Africa shells of ostrich eggs is now helping unscramble the mystery of when these changes took place, providing a timeline for some of the earliest Homo sapiens who settled down to utilize marine food resources along the South African coast more than 100,000 years ago. ....

Western Cape , South Africa , United States , Cape Town , California Institute Of Technology , South African , Elizabeth Niespolo , Graham Avery , Todd Dawson , Iziko South African Museum , University Of California , Princeton University , National Science Foundation , Leakey Foundation , Gordon Getty Foundation , Proceedings Of The National Academy Sciences , Berkeley Geochronology Center , National Academy , Warren Sharp , Middle Stone Age , Iziko South African , Sea Harvest , Western Cape Province , Later Stone Age , Middle East , California Institute ,

What do we know about human evolution? — Quartz Africa


April 17, 2021
Homo
sapiens, rose in Africa some 300,000 years ago. The objects that early humans made and used, known as the Middle Stone Age material culture, are found throughout much of Africa and include a vast range of innovations.
Among them are bow and arrow technology, specialized tool forms, the long-distance transport of objects such as marine shells and obsidian, personal ornamentation, the use of pigments, water storage, and art. Although it is possible that other ancestors of modern humans contributed to this material culture in Africa, some of the earliest Middle Stone Age stone tools have been found with the oldest ....

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