Europe's earliest bone tools found in Britain

Discussion in 'Science' started by Moi621, Aug 13, 2020.

  1. Moi621

    Moi621 Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Deserving of the Anti Dogma files.
    aka

    There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
    Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
    files.


    https://news.yahoo.com/europes-earliest-bone-tools-found-053145980.html
    Europe's earliest bone tools found in Britain


    There's nothing quite like Boxgrove elsewhere in Britain: during excavations, archaeologists uncovered hundreds of stone tools, along with animal bones, that dated to 500,000 years ago.

    [​IMG]
    One of the oldest organic tools in the world. A bone hammer used to make the fine flint bifaces from Boxgrove. The bone shows scraping marks used to prepare the bone as well as pitting left behind from its use in making flint tools

    They were made by the species Homo heidelbergensis, (one of us) a possible ancestor for modern humans and Neanderthals.

    Researchers found a shin bone belonging to one of them - it's the oldest human bone known from Britain.
    .



    Another strike against "out of Africa" purest!
    :woot:
    500K years is way beyond "out of Africa" theory.

    AND
    Support Salutreans as those very ancient Euros who brought
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solutrean_hypothesis
    their "point" to :flagus:. Termed Clovis point for some place way west
    it follows ancient Euros stone point technology. Not anything Asiatic!
    Asiatics who didn't have bamboo favored mounted sharpened chips. ala Aztec.



    Moi :oldman:







    No Canada-1.jpg
    Across an immense, unguarded, ethereal border, Canadians, cool and unsympathetic,

    regard our America with envious eyes and slowly and surely draw their plans against us.
     

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