300,000-year-old wooden tools from Gantangqing, southwest China

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Liu, Jian-Hui; Ruan, Qi-Jun; Ge, Jun-Yi; Huang, Yong-Jiang; Zhang, Xiao-Ling; Liu, Jia; Li, Shu-Feng; Shen, Hui; Wang, Yuan; Stidham, Thomas A.; Deng, Cheng-Long; Li, Sheng-Hua; Han, Fei; Jin, Ying-Shuai; O'Gorman, Kieran; Li, Bo; Dennell, Robin; Gao, Xing
署名单位:
Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology & Paleoanthropology, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Kunming Institute of Botany, CAS; Chengdu University of Technology; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geology & Geophysics, CAS; University of Hong Kong; Yunnan University; University of Wollongong; University of Wollongong; University of Wollongong; University of Exeter
刊物名称:
SCIENCE
ISSN/ISSBN:
0036-8272
DOI:
10.1126/science.adr8540
发表日期:
2025-07-03
页码:
78-83
关键词:
artifacts site
摘要:
Evidence of Early and Middle Pleistocene wooden implements is exceptionally rare, and existing evidence has been found only in Africa and western Eurasia. We report an assemblage of 35 wooden implements from the site of Gantangqing in southwestern China, which was found associated with stone tools, antler billets (soft hammers), and cut-marked bones and is dated from similar to 361,000 to similar to 250,000 years at a 95% confidence interval. The wooden implements include digging sticks and small, complete, hand-held pointed tools. The sophistication of many of these tools offsets the seemingly primitive aspects of stone tool assemblages in the East Asian Early Paleolithic. This discovery suggests that wooden implements might have played an important role in hominin survival and adaptation in Middle Pleistocene East Asia.