The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Wednesday, May 22, 2013
 
'Lucy' Species Used Stone Tools, Fossil Study by California Academy Says
Two stone tool modified bones from Dikika Ethiopia. The two parallel marks on the upper bone provide the oldest known evidence of tool use and meat eating by human ancestors. Dated to 3.4 million years ago, they are nearly a million years older than any previously known cut-marked fossils. AP Photo/Dikika Research Project.

By: Malcolm Ritter, AP Science Writer

NEW YORK (AP).- Two ancient animal bones from Ethiopia show signs of butchering by human ancestors, moving back the earliest evidence for the use of stone tools by about 800,000 years, researchers say.

The bones appear to have been cut and smashed some 3.4 million years ago, the first evidence of stone tool use by Australopithecus afarensis, the species best known for the fossil dubbed "Lucy," says researcher Zeresenay Alemseged.

"We are putting stone tools in their hands," said Alemseged ("Uh-lems-uh-ged") of the California Academy of Sciences, who reports the finding with colleagues in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.

Some experts urged caution about the study's conclusions.

The study authors said the bones indicate the human ancestor used sharp stones to carve meat from the carcasses of large animals and other stones to smash bones to get at the marrow. One bone is a rib from a creature the size of a cow, and the other a leg bone from something the size of a goat. No stone tools were found at the site.

The researchers also called the finding the earliest evidence for meat-eating among hominins, an evolutionary group that includes people and their ancestors.

The study authors attributed the tool use to afarensis because no other hominin is known from that time in the area where the bones were found. The skeleton of a young afarensis female, dubbed "Selam," had previously been found about 200 yards away from the bone site. The Lucy fossil, which dates to 3.2 million years ago, was discovered in the same general area in 1974.

Alemseged said afarensis probably scavenged carcasses rather than hunting live animals, and ate the meat raw. The researchers said it's not clear whether the stone tools were made or were simply stones that were used as tools. But they plan to look for evidence of tool-making.

Alemseged also said that as some afarensis stripped meat from a carcass, others probably stood guard to ward off other animals in return for some of the meat, which would indicate a degree of cooperative behavior.

Until now, the earliest sign of tool use dated to about 2.6 million years ago, also in Ethiopia. It's not clear who used those tools.

Some experts were unconvinced by the Nature paper's arguments.

"I'm very cautious about the conclusions," said Nicholas Toth of Indiana University, a paleoanthropologist who studies early stone tools.

The bones were found on the surface rather than being excavated, he said. That means nobody knows exactly what layers of earth they came from, which is key to knowing their age and associating them with other bones and materials to give them context, he said.

What's more, judging from photos in the Nature paper, the bone markings differ from the marks typically left by stone tools, he said. That raises questions about whether they were actually caused by trampling or animal bites, Toth said.

In fact, those markings look like the work of crocodiles, said Tim White of the University of California, Berkeley. And they don't appear in the places on the bones that one would expect from a butchering, he said.

He also said that 30 years of searching has failed to find any stone tools as old as the bones. "It's not like people haven't been looking. People have been looking intensively," he said.

"An extraordinary claim requires extraordinary evidence," White said. "The evidence is very thin here, and very ambiguous."

But Bernard Wood of George Washington University declared, "I'd be willing to bet a month's salary that those are cut marks (from stone tools) and not tooth marks."

Wood compared the find to the famous 1978 discovery of tracks in Tanzania that showed upright walking 3.6 million years ago, most likely by afarensis.

The bone markings "are as significant a statement about early hominin behavior as the Laetoli footprints are about hominin locomotion," Wood said. While it's reasonable to assume that afarensis wielded the tools, he said, Alemseged's ideas about the butchers being guarded by other afarensis in exchange for meat is "pushing the envelope a bit far."

Wood also said the finding suggests afarensis ate meat but doesn't prove it, because maybe they cut off animal flesh just to get to the marrow.



Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.

California Academy of Sciences | Zeresenay Alemseged | "Lucy" |


Last Week News

August 12, 2010

More than a Dozen Multi-Million Dollar Cars Lead RM's Silver Anniversary Monterey Sale

'Lucy' Species Used Stone Tools, Fossil Study by California Academy of Sciences Says

Mumbai's Taj Hotel Reopens Sunday After 2008 Attacks

MoMA Launches Free iPhone App, Now Available on App Store

Christina Aguilera Lends Her Voice to Support the Arts

Money Fair in Boston Showcases $100,000 Bills, Rare Coins

Renowned International Artists to Display New Works at Beyond/In Western New York

Fundació Antoni Tàpies Presents a New Selection of Works from the Collection

Very Original Features: Is this United Kingdom's Oldest Home?

Martin Luther has Wittenberg, Germany in a Stir 500 Years On

Smithsonian Extends Chance to Glimpse Rare Blue Diamond

Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis Appoints Dominic Molon as Chief Curator

Two Tableaux Vivants After Regent Portraits by Jan de Bray

Clare Twomey's First Solo Exhibition in the United States Will Be at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

Work Begins on Deluxe 17,000-Square-Foot Addition to Dan Morphy Auctions Gallery

It Bag, Watch Out: France's Duvelleroy Folding Fan is Back

Hannah Eidinow's New Street Theatre Commission for the Vauxhall Collective Comes to Edinburgh

Winslow Homer Classic Portrait Featured in American Treasures Stamp Series

SFMOMA to Present Exposed: Voyeurism, Surveillance and The Camera Since 1870

Relic from Darwin's Epic Beagle Voyage for Sale at Bonhams

Asia's Most Sought after Wine in Pristine Condition with Perfect Provenance

Artistic Explorations by 22 Artists at Benrimon Contemporary

Rare Communion Silver Bought for Birmingham

August 11, 2010

Museum Wiesbaden Restitutes Painting by Dutch Baroque Painter Pieter de Grebber

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to Feature Elvis 1956 Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer

Oil-Inspired Spread for August Issue of Vogue Italia Stirs Muck

Scarlett's "Gone With the Wind" Dresses in Bad Shape, Need Repairs

Sean O'Harrow Named Director of University of Iowa Museum of Art

Sotheby's Hong Kong to Offer Lots Estimated in Excess of $205 Million

Cabinet Secrets: Exhibition of Prints and Drawings at Tel Aviv Museum of Art

Alberta Artist Materializes Childhood Memory in Elaborate Installation

9/11 Museum Going Up in New York City Offers Raw Experience

Palazzo Strozzi Announces "Bronzino: Artist and Poet of the Court of the Medici"

New Exhibit by Ritsue Mishima Puts Aberdeen Art Gallery in a Spin

Bruce Museum Acquires Sculpture by Gaston Lachaise

Onassis Foundation to Hold a Major Conference on the Greek Cultural Legacy

White House Backdrop is Fine Art

Antiques Dealers Fair Limited to Launch New Boutique Fine Art and Antiques Fair in Leicestershire

Fire at Majdanek Destroys Shoes of Nazi Victims

Falmouth Acquires Gotch Masterpiece at Record Price

Mississippi Museum of Art Presents Art by Choice Exhibition, Sale and Auction

Royal Scottish Academy Awards £21,000 to Scottish Artists

August 10, 2010

Museum to Present Major Survey Devoted to Italian Artist Michelangelo Pistoletto

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to Feature Elvis 1956 Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer

Oil-Inspired Spread for August Issue of Vogue Italia Stirs Muck

Scarlett's "Gone With the Wind" Dresses in Bad Shape, Need Repairs

Sean O'Harrow Named Director of University of Iowa Museum of Art

Sotheby's Hong Kong Autumn Sales to Offer Lots Estimated in Excess of $205 Million

Cabinet Secrets: Exhibition of Prints and Drawings at Tel Aviv Museum of Art

Scottish Government: Titian's Diana and Actaeon Draws in Crowds

Lehman Brothers Art Work to Go Under the Hammer at Christie's

Art London Returns to Chelsea this October with More than 70 Art Galleries

Julien's Auctions to Hold Historic First Pop Culture Auction in Asia

Priceless Record of Native American World on Brink of Change at Bonhams

Painting by Monet to Make a Planned Early Departure from Exhibition

Richard Avedon's Lively Images at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Artist Brian Borrello Creates New Print Series Using Actual BP Oil

Works by Three Major Northern Lights to Star in Bonhams Auction

Winner of Historic Houses Restoration Award 2010 Announced

Family Learning Centre Construction Under Way at the Art Gallery of Ontario

Mexico, Latin American Seat for Cultural Property Protection Center

Ancient Bison Kill Site Uncovered in Montana

Maine State Museum Hosts Sardine Canning Exhibit

Morse Museum Expansion Recalls Grandeur of Louis Comfort Tiffany's Personal Estate

Manhattan Mogul Elie Hirschfeld Acquires $2,000,000 Original Frank Stella Painting

August 9, 2010

Indian Show at National Gallery has Been 10 Years in Preparation Says Anish Kapoor

Scottish Government: Titian's Diana and Actaeon Draws in Crowds

Lehman Brothers Art Work to Go Under the Hammer at Christie's

Art London Returns to Chelsea this October with More than 70 Art Galleries

Julien's Auctions to Hold Historic First Pop Culture Auction in Asia

Priceless Record of Native American World on Brink of Change at Bonhams

Painting by Monet to Make a Planned Early Departure from Exhibition

Stories of War At Sea at Imperial War Museum North in Manchester

Old Masters from a Private Collection to Be Shown at Royal Picture Gallery

European Design Exhibition Coming To Milwaukee Art Museum

Hirshhorn's Black Box Space for New Media Celebrates Its Fifth Anniversary

Griffin Museum's Focus Award Recipients and Presenters Announced

Ellis Island Experience is Focus of Exhibition at Michener Art Museum

Historic Royal Palaces Awards Sculpture Commission to Kendra Haste

Jen Bekman Gallery Featuirng Exhibition by Twenty-Seven Artists

Tampa Museum of Art Debuts...Musical Lines in My Hands: The Work of Dominique Labauvie

Nation's Illustration Museum Celebrates 10th Anniversary

"The Fabric of New Orleans": Two Great Local Icons, Unite to Support The Arts

Academy Art Museum Presents It;s Fifty Works from the Herbert Vogel Collection

From Wasteful to Tasteful at the Racine Art Museum

Lorenzo Dow Turner Exhibition Opens at the Anacostia Community Museum

Botanical Illustration Exhibition Highlights the Art Behind Conservation

"Myths, Religion & Ritual: Indian Art from the Koblenzer Collection" Now Open at the Allentown Art Museum

Cuban Curator Gerardo Mosquera Chosen New Curator of PhotoEspaña International Festival

August 8, 2010

Andy Warhol Screenprints Included in Bonhams' Pioneers of Popular Culture Sale

Joslyn Art Museum Celebrates a Contemporary American Sculptor

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Showcases Works by Paul Klee

Valentino Retrospective Showing Exclusively in Brisbane

France's Most Prestigious Art Fair will Bring Together 194 Galleries of Art

Richard Misrach: After Katrina Marks Gift of Katrina Photographs Series to MFAH

Whitney Museum Extends John Jonas Gruen Exhibition

National Gallery of Victoria Celebrates the Work Artist John Davis

ICC to Present World Premiere Retrospective of Ghanaian Artist

Portland Museum Appoints New Curator of Northwest Art

Museum of Contemporary Art Presents Carrie Gundersdorf

Delaware Art Museum Presents Contemporary Ceramic Sculpture

Corning Museum of Glass Searches for Director of Curatorial Affairs

Books from the Personal Collection of Book Soup Founder Glenn Goldman on the Auction Block

Frieze Art Fair Announces Frieze Music 2010

Exhibition at the Menil Collection Features Works Never Before Displayed in the Museum

Freer Gallery's "Chinamania" Reveals Whistler's Love Affair with Blue and White

BP Saturdays: Loud Tate - Free Annual Art and Music Event at Tate Britain

August 7, 2010

New Salvador Dali Exhibition of Late Works Opens Exclusively at Atlanta's High Museum

MFA Houston Commissions Artist Cai Guo-Qiang to Create Gunpowder Drawing

Cambodia to Restore 'Killing Fields' Skull-Filled Memorial

Bertoia Auctions to Sell Toys from K-B Toys Co-Founder Collection

Whitney Announces First Major U.S. Retrospective of the Work of Paul Thek

BALTIC Announces a Major Exhibition of the Work of Anselm Kiefer

Now Reopened, Israel Museum has New Look at History of Holy Land

Guggenheim - Hugo Boss Prize Nominees Garner Accolades

10 Years On, Mystery of Confederate Submarine Remains

Rome Officials to Open Colosseum to Tourists after Dark

Dia Announces Appointment of Susan Sayre Batton as Director of Dia:Beacon

Visitors Wait in Line for Seven Hours to See Frida Kahlo Exhibition in Berlin

Contemporary Arts Center App Explores Cincinnati through Shepard Fairey Murals

Newport Antiques Show Celebrates Fourth Year with Scrimshaw and Miniature Portraits Exhibit

Salvador Dalí Sculpture Donated to the City of Andorra

48 Hours in South Dakota: Rushmore, Badlands and More

Appleton Art Center Reopens, Changes Name to The Trout Museum of Art

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD

Related Stories



'Lucy' Species Used Stone Tools, Fossil Study by California Academy of Sciences Says



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site