• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Naturally-Formed Sharp Stones May Have Been Key To Early Humans Learning Knapping

April 7, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

A new proposal offers an easy route for our ancestors to have made one of their earliest and most important technological advances. Instead of some australopithecine genius coming up with the idea of carefully striking stones to produce sharp blades, early humans may have begun by using those they found precut. The idea might refashion how we envisage a step in our development as more important than any specific tool.

“The secret is to bang the rocks together, guys,” a pan-galactic announcer in The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy tells any newly sentient beings who have stumbled on his broadcast. But what if it’s not the start? What if banging rocks together is a later stage of technology after finding sharp rocks and putting them to effective use?

A big step in the story of human advancement begins with the use of sharp tools that allowed hominins to kill larger prey than their puny strength would have allowed, and to cut it up for transport or fair distribution.

However, the conventional version of this story, which begins with hitting large stones with small stone hammers to produce cutting instruments, now faces a challenge. A team of anthropologists thinks that many sharp stones were lying around the plains of Africa naturally, and our ancestors used these – perhaps after literally stumbling on one and cutting themselves – before learning to make more.

A field of conchoidal- and thermal-fractured chert ‘balls’ near Duqm, Oman.

Potential stone tools are sometimes so common finding one is just a matter of turning some candidates over.

“I don’t think it was a ‘Eureka!’ moment whereby hominins first made a sharp stone flake by intention or by accident and then went to look for something to cut,” said Professor Metin Eren of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History in a statement. “There is no reason to produce sharp stone tools unless the need to cut is already in place.”

Stones with a sharp edge, but also well suited to be held in the hand – which the team calls “naturaliths” – are abundant where suitable rocks are present, the team argues. “Naturaliths can be, and are being, endlessly produced in a wide range of settings and thus may occur on the landscape in far greater numbers than archaeologists currently understand or acknowledge,” they write.

Rocks washed into fast-running streams or trampled on by herds of hoofed animals or elephants can break against each other, the authors point out, and some have a tendency to do so in ways that produce sharp edges. The team notes that naturaliths are common even in Antarctica, where there is no possibility they were made by ancient primates.

Professor Michelle Bebber was struck by the abundance of naturally produced sharp rocks in Oman. “It is quite astonishing… natural knives were likely readily available to our hominin ancestors,” said Bebber.

Close-up examples of the conchoidal- and thermal-fractured chert ‘balls’ near Duqm, Oman.

Chert balls in Oman can fragment into many hand-sized rocks, some of them sharp enough to make into cutting tools without modification.

Dr Emma Finestone noted that sites where we have found evidence of early hominins processing food often occur close to sources of naturaliths. “A hominin could have picked up and used a naturally sharp rock to process a carcass or plant material that might have been difficult to access using just their hands and teeth,” the researcher explained.

From there, it is not hard to imagine tribes of early humans coming to rely on naturaliths. Only when the local resource had been exhausted, perhaps blunted from overuse, might deliberate manufacturing have begun. Alternatively, someone with a usable, but inferior, stone might have been inspired to try to reproduce the local favorite. 

We now know that tool use is very widespread among animals – even some fish do it – but one thing humans still seem to have to ourselves (unless we assist) is secondary tool use: using a tool to make another tool. More than fire or language, crossing the threshold to secondary tool use might be the thing that really made us who we are. Put like this, it makes sense that to take such a difficult leap we needed a runup, such as thousands of years of using naturaliths might have provided. Even naturalith use may have developed from bone tools that started with the breaking of large prey animals’ bones. 

The extra protein the knives made available would have come in handy – arguably helping brains to grow – but the secondary tool precedent may have opened up a world of new possibilities in our ancestors’ minds.

“This is the most parsimonious hypothesis for the origin of hominin stone technology to date,” said Eren. “But parsimony is not necessarily correct – archaeologists now need to test our hypothesis and search for naturalith use by hominins between 3 and 6 million years ago. It is an exciting prospect… if hominins are using naturally sharp rocks as knives, then the archaeological record is going to get a whole lot older.”

Telling naturaliths from deliberately knapped stones – particularly at the start of humanity’s development of stoneworking – may present a challenge, but the authors propose a number of lines of research that could be useful

There are reasons beyond curiosity to want to know if Eren, Bebber, Finestone, and co-authors are right. The “cumulative culture” they describe presents a profound challenge to the popular story of how major scientific developments occur. Instead of a lone genius doing all the important work – and deserving all the profits – progress may always have depended on small contributions of many people and the natural environment.

The study is published in Archaeometry.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Evolito’s electric motors look set to take off in aerospace where YASA left off in automotive
  2. Afghan girls stuck at home, waiting for Taliban plan to re-open schools
  3. This Is What Yesterday’s Partial Solar Eclipse Looked Like From Space
  4. Can We Learn To Be Happier? Find Out More In Issue 14 Of CURIOUS – Out Now

Source Link: Naturally-Formed Sharp Stones May Have Been Key To Early Humans Learning Knapping

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Martian Mudstone Has Features That Might Be Biosignatures, New Brain Implant Can Decode Your Internal Monologue, And Much More This Week
  • Crocodiles Weren’t All Blood-Thirsty Killers, Some Evolved To Be Plant-Eating Vegetarians
  • Stratospheric Warming Event May Be Unfolding In The Southern Polar Vortex, Shaking Up Global Weather Systems
  • 15 Years Ago, Bees In Brooklyn Appeared Red After Snacking Where They Shouldn’t
  • Carnian Pluvial Event: It Rained For 2 Million Years — And It Changed Planet Earth Forever
  • There’s Volcanic Unrest At The Campi Flegrei Caldera – Here’s What We Know
  • The “Rumpelstiltskin Effect”: When Just Getting A Diagnosis Is Enough To Start The Healing
  • In 1962, A Boy Found A Radioactive Capsule And Brought It Inside His House — With Tragic Results
  • This Cute Creature Has One Of The Largest Genomes Of Any Mammal, With 114 Chromosomes
  • Little Air And Dramatic Evolutionary Changes Await Future Humans On Mars
  • “Black Hole Stars” Might Solve Unexplained JWST Discovery
  • Pretty In Purple: Why Do Some Otters Have Purple Teeth And Bones? It’s All Down To Their Spiky Diets
  • The World’s Largest Carnivoran Is A 3,600-Kilogram Giant That Weighs More Than Your Car
  • Devastating “Rogue Waves” Finally Have An Explanation
  • Meet The “Masked Seducer”, A Unique Bat With A Never-Before-Seen Courtship Display
  • Alaska’s Salmon River Is Turning Orange – And It’s A Stark Warning
  • Meet The Heaviest Jelly In The Seas, Weighing Over Twice As Much As A Grand Piano
  • For The First Time, We’ve Found Evidence Climate Change Is Attracting Invasive Species To Canadian Arctic
  • What Are Microfiber Cloths, And How Do They Clean So Well?
  • Stowaway Rat That Hopped On A Flight From Miami Was A “Wake-Up Call” For Global Health
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version