miércoles, 22 de enero de 2014

This intricately crafted harpoon tip is 35,000 years old

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A harpoon tip dating to 35,000 years ago has been discovered on Timor, an island 250 miles northeast of Darwin, Australia. The ancient artifact, which was hewn from bone, is notable for its design, the complexity of which suggests humans in the region manufactured sophisticated weaponry earlier than previously believed.

In the January 15th issue of the Journal of Human Evolution, researchers led by Australian National University archaeologist Sue O'Connor propose that the ancient inhabitants of Timor used harpoons to hunt large fish from boats. The notion that our ancestors were equipped to make meals of ocean animals 35,000 years ago is not, in itself, surprising; in 2011, another team led by O'Connor reported the discovery of a shelter in East Timor harboring the remains of pelagic and other fish species dating to 42,000 years ago – compelling evidence that early modern humans in the region successfully practiced deep-sea fishing.  [...] io9.com/


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Actualización 24-01-14. Artefacto tallado en hueso de inusual diseño con 35.000 años de antigüedad recuperado en Timor  (B&W1)
La revista Journal of Human Evolution ha presentado una interesante publicación titulada "Are osseous artefacts a window to perishable material culture? Implications of an unusually complex bone tool from the Late Pleistocene of East Timor". El trabajo presenta un extraño artefacto tallado en hueso que ha sido recuperado en el yacimiento de Matja Kuru 2, en la isla de Timor, y que ha sido datado ...

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salaman.es dijo...

Actualización. Artefacto tallado en hueso de inusual diseño con 35.000 años de antigüedad recuperado en Timor