SAN FRANCISCO--Archaeologists working in the Kenyan Rift Valley have discovered the oldest known stone tools in the world. Dated to around 3.3 million years ago, the implements are some 700,000 years older than stone tools from Ethiopia that previously held this distinction. They are so old, in fact, that they predate the by half a million years. As such they suggest that stone tool manufacture began not with but with a more primitive member of the human family.
Exactly what the Lomekwi knappers used their tools for is not yet clear. Animal bones recovered thus far at the site do not show any signs of human activity. But evidence from another site does suggest that hominins (the group that includes and its extinct relatives) were butchering animals back then. In 2010 scientists working at the site of in Ethiopia, where fossils belonging to Australopithecus afarensis had previously turned up, announced that they had recovered 3.4 million-year-old animal bones bearing distinctive marks. They argued that in the course of slicing meat off the bones with stone tools. Some skeptics countered that the alleged cut marks were instead the result of the bones having been trampled by passing animals; others suggested that they were bite marks from crocodiles. The discovery of the Lomekwi tools does not prove that hominins made the Dikika marks, but it shows that near contemporaries of the Dikika hominins made implements capable of leaving behind such marks.
The identity of the Lomekwi knappers is unknown. If stone tool manufacture is the exclusive purview of then must have evolved far earlier than the fossil record currently indicates. A more plausible scenario, Harmand said, is that or another hominin, Kenyanthropus (found nearby)—both of which are known to have been around 3.3 million years ago--made the Lomekwi tools. Whether is in fact a distinct hominin lineage or part of is a matter of debate, however.
Up to this point, the earliest stone tools have been considered part of the so-called Oldowan toolmaking tradition. Louis Leakey coined the term to describe tools found at Olduvai Gorge in the 1930s. But Harmand says the newly discovered tools are different enough from the early Oldowan implements to warrant a new name: the Lomekwian.
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