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Unknown Early Hominins Ate Elephants and Then Used Their Bones to Make Tools
Learn more about the archaeological discovery of an ancient elephant carcass surrounded by hundreds of butchery tools.
IFLScience on MSN
400,000-Year-Old Fossil Shows Butchering Elephants Helped Early Humans To Supersize Their Tools
The authors of a study of the specimen conclude the elephant was butchered using small stones, as indicated by both the ...
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Early Humans Moved Stones Long Distances to Make Tools 600,000 Years Earlier Than Thought
Early humans who made some of the oldest known stone tools might have traveled miles to secure the best materials for their construction, new research suggests. Archaeologists traced the origins of ...
The Nyayanga excavation site in Kenya, in July 2025. Fossils and Oldowan tools have been excavated from the tan and reddish-brown sediments, which date to more than 2.6 million years old. T. W.
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