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Ideas, Inventions And Innovations : Oldest Hominins of Olduvai Gorge Persisted Across Changing Environments


Ideas, Inventions And Innovations
Oldest Hominins of Olduvai Gorge Persisted Across Changing Environments
~2.0 to 1.8 million year-old archaeological site demonstrates that early humans had the skills and tools to cope with ecological change
 
Olduvai (now Oldupai) Gorge, known as the Cradle of Humankind, is a UNESCO World Heritage site in Tanzania, made famous by Louis and Mary Leakey. New interdisciplinary field work has led to the discovery of the oldest archaeological site in Oldupai Gorge as reported in Nature Communications, which shows that early human used a wide diversity of habitats amidst environmental changes across a 200,000 year-long period.
Overview of Ewass Oldupa in Olduvai (Oldupai) Gorge, Tanzania ....

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Two-Million-Year-Old Stone Tools Found in East Africa - Archaeology Magazine


JENA, GERMANY
Courthouse News Service reports that an international team of researchers has discovered stone tools dated to between two and 1.8 million years old in Tanzania’s Ewass Oldupa, the western area of Oldupai Gorge, a 28-mile-long canyon known for its hominin fossils. Recovered from layers of stratified sediments, the artifacts are the oldest stone tools found in the gorge to date. The tools include pebble and cobble cores, sharp-edged flakes, and polyhedral cobbles. Fossils of wild cattle, pigs, hippos, panthers, lions, hyenas, primates, reptiles, and birds were also uncovered in the layers, along with evidence of changing habitats over the 200,000-year period. The habitats included systems of rivers and lakes, fern meadows, woodlands, palm groves, dry steppes, and evidence of natural burning. The recurrence of the Oldowan tools in these layers suggests that the hominins moved in and out of the area during periods of volcanic activity and as the environment shifte ....

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Early humans had already developed the skills and tools to survive climate change, study finds


They found that they kept the tools and in place despite environment changes 
This suggests they were able to adapt to very different climates over time
The researchers say this adaptability could have helped in future migrations 
Early humans living two million years ago already had the skills and tools they needed in order to cope with the effects of climate change, study shows. 
Archaeologists from the Max Planck Institute studied changes to the environment and habitats of early hominins at the Oldupai Gorge heritage site in Tanzania. 
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Also known as the Cradle of Humankind , new field work at the site revealed our ancestors remained stable despite environment changes over 200,000 years.  ....

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Newly Unearthed Site Shows How Early Humans Adapted to Environmental Changes


A view of an archeological site in Tanzania where researchers say they discovered clues to how early humans lived 2 million years ago. (Michael Petraglia)
(CN) In a region of eastern Africa known as the Cradle of Humankind, archeologists have unearthed an ancient site that they say points to early humans’ ability to adapt to sudden environmental shifts and longer-term climate change.
The Oldupai Gorge in Tanzania, part of a broader UNESCO World Heritage site, is well-known among archeologists for its rich evidence of ancient history. For decades, researchers have combed the gorge for fossils and tools from the long-ago presence of hominins, the small-brained ancestors of humans. ....

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