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Acheulean

Acheulean (/əˈʃliən/; also Acheulian and Mode II), from the French acheuléen after the type site of Saint-Acheul, is an archaeological industry of stone tool manufacture characterized by the distinctive oval and pear-shaped "hand axes" associated with Homo erectus and derived species such as Homo heidelbergensis.

Acheulean
Map of the distribution of Middle Pleistocene (Acheulean) cleaver finds
Geographical rangeAfrica, Europe, and Asia
PeriodLower Paleolithic
Dates1.95–0.13 Mya
Type siteSaint-Acheul (Amiens)
Preceded byOldowan
Followed byMousterian, Clactonian, Micoquien, Aterian, Soanian, Sangoan, Acheulo-Yabrudian complex, Fauresmith industry
A cordiform biface as commonly found in the Acheulean (replica)
Acheulean hand-axes from Kent. The types shown are (clockwise from top) cordate, ficron, and ovate.[citation needed]
Depiction of a Terra Amata hut in Nice, France, as postulated by Henry de Lumley dated to 400 thousand years ago.[1]

Acheulean tools were produced during the Lower Palaeolithic era across Africa and much of West Asia, South Asia, East Asia and Europe, and are typically found with Homo erectus remains. It is thought that Acheulean technologies first developed about 2 million years ago, derived from the more primitive Oldowan technology associated with Homo habilis.[2] The Acheulean includes at least the early part of the Middle Paleolithic. Its end is not well defined, depending on whether Sangoan (also known as "Epi-Acheulean") is included, it may be taken to last until as late as 130,000 years ago. In Europe and Western Asia, early Neanderthals adopted Acheulean technology, transitioning to Mousterian by about 160,000 years ago.

History of research edit

The type site for the Acheulean is Saint-Acheul, a suburb of Amiens, the capital of the Somme department in Picardy, where artifacts were found in 1859.[3]

John Frere is generally credited as being the first to suggest a very ancient date for Acheulean hand-axes. In 1797, he sent two examples to the Royal Academy in London from Hoxne in Suffolk. He had found them in prehistoric lake deposits along with the bones of extinct animals and concluded that they were made by people "who had not the use of metals" and that they belonged to a "very ancient period indeed, even beyond the present world".[4] His ideas were, however, ignored by his contemporaries, who subscribed to a pre-Darwinian view of human evolution.[citation needed]

Later, Jacques Boucher de Crèvecœur de Perthes, working between 1836 and 1846, collected further examples of hand-axes and fossilised animal bone from the gravel river terraces of the Somme near Abbeville in northern France. Again, his theories attributing great antiquity to the finds were spurned by his colleagues, until one of de Perthes' main opponents, Marcel Jérôme Rigollot, began finding more tools near Saint Acheul. Following visits to both Abbeville and Saint Acheul by the geologist Joseph Prestwich, the age of the tools was finally accepted.[citation needed]

In 1872, Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet described the characteristic hand-axe tools as belonging to L'Epoque de St Acheul. The industry was renamed as the Acheulean in 1925.[citation needed]

Dating the Acheulean edit

Providing calendrical dates and ordered chronological sequences in the study of early stone tool manufacture is often accomplished through one or more geological techniques, such as radiometric dating, often potassium-argon dating, and magnetostratigraphy. From the Konso Formation of Ethiopia, Acheulean hand-axes are dated to about 1.5 million years ago using radiometric dating of deposits containing volcanic ashes.[5] Acheulean tools in South Asia have also been found to be dated as far as 1.5 million years ago.[6] However, in 2003 examples of the Acheulean from the West Turkana region of Kenya were described[7] which have been dated through the method of magnetostratigraphy to about 1.76 million years ago,[8] and in 2023 finds from Ethiopia were reported dating to 1.95 million years ago.[2] The earliest user of Acheulean tools may have been Homo ergaster, who first appeared about 1.8 million years ago (not all researchers use this formal name, and instead prefer to call these users early Homo erectus[9]). However, it is impossible to know for sure whether Homo ergaster was the only maker of early Acheulean tools, since other hominin species, such as Homo habilis, also lived in East Africa at this time[10]

From geological dating of sedimentary deposits, it appears that the Acheulean originated in Africa and spread to Asian, Middle Eastern, and European areas sometime between 1.5 million years ago and about 800 thousand years ago.[11][12] In individual regions, this dating can be considerably refined; in Europe for example, it was thought that Acheulean methods did not reach the continent until around 500,000 years ago. However, more recent research demonstrated that hand-axes from Spain were made more than 900,000 years ago.[12]

Relative dating techniques (based on a presumption that technology progresses over time) suggest that Acheulean tools followed on from earlier, cruder tool-making methods, but there is considerable chronological overlap in early prehistoric stone-working industries, with evidence in some regions that Acheulean tool-using groups were contemporary with other, less sophisticated industries such as the Clactonian[13] and then later with the more sophisticated Mousterian, as well. It is therefore important not to see the Acheulean as a neatly defined period or one that happened as part of a clear sequence but as one tool-making technique that flourished especially well in early prehistory. The enormous geographic spread of Acheulean techniques also makes the name unwieldy as it represents numerous regional variations on a similar theme. The term Acheulean does not represent a common culture in the modern sense, rather it is a basic method for making stone tools that was shared across much of the Old World.[citation needed]

The very earliest Acheulean assemblages often contain numerous Oldowan-style flakes and core forms and it is almost certain that the Acheulean developed from this older industry. These industries are known as the Developed Oldowan and are almost certainly transitional between the Oldowan and Acheulean.[citation needed]

Regionally subdivided end times of the Acheulean show that it persisted long after the diffusion of Middle Palaeolithic technologies in multiple continental regions and ended over 100,000 years apart – in Africa and the Near East: 175–166 kya, in Europe: 141–130 kya and in Asia: 57–53 kya.[14][15]

Acheulean stone tools edit

Stages edit

 
An Acheulean handaxe, Haute-Garonne France – MHNT

In the four divisions of prehistoric stone-working,[16] Acheulean artefacts are classified as Mode 2, meaning they are more advanced than the (usually earlier) Mode 1 tools of the Clactonian or Oldowan/Abbevillian industries but lacking the sophistication of the (usually later) Mode 3 Middle Palaeolithic technology, exemplified by the Mousterian industry.[citation needed]

The Mode 1 industries created rough flake tools by hitting a suitable stone with a hammerstone. The resulting flake that broke off would have a natural sharp edge for cutting and could afterwards be sharpened further by striking another smaller flake from the edge if necessary (known as "retouch"). These early toolmakers may also have worked the stone they took the flake from (known as a core) to create chopper cores although there is some debate over whether these items were tools or just discarded cores.[17]

The Mode 2 Acheulean toolmakers also used the Mode 1 flake tool method but supplemented it by using bone, antler, or wood to shape stone tools. This type of hammer, compared to stone, yields more control over the shape of the finished tool. Unlike the earlier Mode 1 industries, it was the core that was prized over the flakes that came from it. Another advance was that the Mode 2 tools were worked symmetrically and on both sides indicating greater care in the production of the final tool.[citation needed]

Mode 3 technology emerged towards the end of Acheulean dominance and involved the Levallois technique, most famously exploited by the Mousterian industry. Transitional tool forms between the two are called Mousterian of Acheulean Tradition, or MTA types. The long blades of the Upper Palaeolithic Mode 4 industries appeared long after the Acheulean was abandoned.[citation needed]

As the period of Acheulean tool use is so vast, efforts have been made to classify various stages of it such as John Wymer's division into Early Acheulean, Middle Acheulean, Late Middle Acheulean and Late Acheulean[18] for material from Britain. These schemes are normally regional and their dating and interpretations vary.[19]

In Africa, there is a distinct difference in the tools made before and after 600,000 years ago with the older group being thicker and less symmetric and the younger being more extensively trimmed.[20]

Manufacture edit

The primary innovation associated with Acheulean hand-axes is that the stone was worked symmetrically and on both sides. For the latter reason, handaxes are, along with cleavers, bifacially worked tools that could be manufactured from the large flakes themselves or from prepared cores.[21]

Tool types found in Acheulean assemblages include pointed, cordate, ovate, ficron, and bout-coupé hand-axes (referring to the shapes of the final tool), cleavers, retouched flakes, scrapers, and segmental chopping tools. Materials used were determined by available local stone types; flint is most often associated with the tools but its use is concentrated in Western Europe; in Africa sedimentary and igneous rock such as mudstone and basalt were most widely used, for example. Other source materials include chalcedony, quartzite, andesite, sandstone, chert, and shale. Even relatively soft rock such as limestone could be exploited.[22] In all cases the toolmakers worked their handaxes close to the source of their raw materials, suggesting that the Acheulean was a set of skills passed between individual groups.[23]

Some smaller tools were made from large flakes that had been struck from stone cores. These flake tools and the distinctive waste flakes produced in Acheulean tool manufacture suggest a more considered technique, one that required the toolmaker to think one or two steps ahead during work that necessitated a clear sequence of steps to create perhaps several tools in one sitting.[citation needed]

A hard hammerstone would first be used to rough out the shape of the tool from the stone by removing large flakes. These large flakes might be re-used to create tools. The tool maker would work around the circumference of the remaining stone core, removing smaller flakes alternately from each face. The scar created by the removal of the preceding flake would provide a striking platform for the removal of the next. Misjudged blows or flaws in the material used could cause problems, but a skilled toolmaker could overcome them.[citation needed]

Once the roughout shape was created, a further phase of flaking was undertaken to make the tool thinner. The thinning flakes were removed using a softer hammer, such as bone or antler. The softer hammer required more careful preparation of the striking platform and this would be abraded using a coarse stone to ensure the hammer did not slide off when struck.[citation needed]

Final shaping was then applied to the usable cutting edge of the tool, again using fine removal of flakes. Some Acheulean tools were sharpened instead by the removal of a tranchet flake. This was struck from the lateral edge of the hand-axe close to the intended cutting area, resulting in the removal of a flake running along (parallel to) the blade of the axe to create a neat and very sharp working edge. This distinctive tranchet flake can be identified amongst flint-knapping debris at Acheulean sites.[citation needed]

Use edit

 
Acheulean hand-axe from Egypt. Found on a hill top plateau, 1400 feet above sea level, nine miles northwest of the city of Naqada, Egypt. Paleolithic artifact displayed in the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology of London.

Loren Eiseley calculated[24] that Acheulean tools have an average useful cutting edge of 20 centimetres (8 inches), making them much more efficient than the 5-centimetre (2 in) average of Oldowan tools.[citation needed]

Use-wear analysis on Acheulean tools suggests there was generally no specialization in the different types created and that they were multi-use implements. Functions included hacking wood from a tree, cutting animal carcasses as well as scraping and cutting hides when necessary. Some tools, however, could have been better suited to digging roots or butchering animals than others.[citation needed]

Alternative theories include a use for ovate hand-axes as a kind of hunting discus to be hurled at prey.[25] Puzzlingly, there are also examples of sites where hundreds of hand-axes, many impractically large and also apparently unused, have been found in close association together. Sites such as Melka Kunturé in Ethiopia, Olorgesailie in Kenya, Isimila in Tanzania, and Kalambo Falls in Zambia have produced evidence that suggests Acheulean hand-axes might not always have had a functional purpose.[citation needed]

Recently, it has been suggested[26] that the Acheulean tool users adopted the handaxe as a social artifact, meaning that it embodied something beyond its function of a butchery or wood cutting tool. Knowing how to create and use these tools would have been a valuable skill and the more elaborate ones suggest that they played a role in their owners' identity and their interactions with others. This would help explain the apparent over-sophistication of some examples which may represent a "historically accrued social significance".[27]

One theory goes further and suggests that some special hand-axes were made and displayed by males in search of a mate, using a large, well-made hand-axe to demonstrate that they possessed sufficient strength and skill to pass on to their offspring. Once they had attracted a female at a group gathering, it is suggested that they would discard their axes, perhaps explaining why so many are found together.[28] This popular sexual selection hypothesis is controversial due to the assumptions made about sexual selection among extinct organisms.[29]

Hand-axe as a leftover core edit

Stone knapping with limited digital dexterity makes the center of mass the required direction of flake removal. Physics then dictates a circular or oval end pattern, similar to the handaxe, for a leftover core after flake production. This would explain the abundance, wide distribution, proximity to source, consistent shape, and lack of actual use, of these artifacts.[30][additional citation(s) needed]

Money edit

Mimi Lam, a researcher from the University of British Columbia, has suggested that Acheulean hand-axes became "the first commodity: A marketable good or service that has value and is used as an item for exchange."[31]

Distribution edit

class=notpageimage|
Map of Afro-Eurasia showing important sites of the Acheulean industry (clickable map).

The geographic distribution of Acheulean tools – and thus the peoples who made them – is often interpreted as being the result of palaeo-climatic and ecological factors, such as glaciation and the desertification of the Sahara Desert.[32]

 
Acheulean Biface from Saint Acheul

Acheulean stone tools have been found across the continent of Africa, save for the dense rainforest around the River Congo which is not thought to have been colonized by hominids until later. It is thought that from Africa their use spread north and east to Asia: from Anatolia, through the Arabian Peninsula, across modern day Iran[33] and Pakistan, and into India, and beyond. In Europe their users reached the Pannonian Basin and the western Mediterranean regions, modern day France, the Low Countries, western Germany, and southern and central Britain. Areas further north did not see human occupation until much later, due to glaciation. In Athirampakkam at Chennai in Tamil Nadu the Acheulean age started at 1.51 mya and it is also prior than North India and Europe.[34]

Until the 1980s, it was thought that the humans who arrived in East Asia abandoned the hand-axe technology of their ancestors and adopted chopper tools instead. An apparent division between Acheulean and non-Acheulean tool industries was identified by Hallam L. Movius, who drew the Movius Line across northern India to show where the traditions seemed to diverge. Later finds of Acheulean tools at Chongokni in South Korea and also in Mongolia and China, however, cast doubt on the reliability of Movius's distinction.[35] Since then, a different division known as the Roe Line has been suggested. This runs across North Africa to Israel and thence to India, separating two different techniques used by Acheulean toolmakers. North and east of the Roe Line, Acheulean hand-axes were made directly from large stone nodules and cores; while, to the south and west, they were made from flakes struck from these nodules.[36]

 
Biface (trihedral) Amar Merdeg, Mehran, National Museum of Iran

Acheulean tool users edit

Most notably, however, it is Homo ergaster (sometimes called early Homo erectus), whose assemblages are almost exclusively Acheulean, who used the technique. Later, the related species Homo heidelbergensis (the common ancestor of both Neanderthals and Homo sapiens) used it extensively.[citation needed] Late Acheulean tools were still used by species derived from H. erectus, including Homo sapiens idaltu and early Neanderthals.[37]

The symmetry of the hand-axes has been used to suggest that Acheulean tool users possessed the ability to use language;[38] the parts of the brain connected with fine control and movement are located in the same region that controls speech. The wider variety of tool types compared to earlier industries and their aesthetically as well as functionally pleasing form could indicate a higher intellectual level in Acheulean tool users than in earlier hominines.[39] Others argue that there is no correlation between spatial abilities in tool making and linguistic behaviour, and that language is not learned or conceived in the same manner as artefact manufacture.[40]

Lower Palaeolithic finds made in association with Acheulean hand-axes, such as the Venus of Berekhat Ram,[41] have been used to argue for artistic expression amongst the tool users. The incised elephant tibia from Bilzingsleben[42] in Germany, and ochre finds from Kapthurin in Kenya[43] and Duinefontein in South Africa,[44] are sometimes cited as being some of the earliest examples of an aesthetic sensibility in human history. There are numerous other explanations put forward for the creation of these artefacts; however, evidence of human art did not become commonplace until around 50,000 years ago, after the emergence of modern Homo sapiens.[45]

The kill site at Boxgrove in England is another famous Acheulean site. Up until the 1970s these kill sites, often at waterholes where animals would gather to drink, were interpreted as being where Acheulean tool users killed game, butchered their carcasses, and then discarded the tools they had used. Since the advent of zooarchaeology, which has placed greater emphasis on studying animal bones from archaeological sites, this view has changed. Many of the animals at these kill sites have been found to have been killed by other predator animals, so it is likely that humans of the period supplemented hunting with scavenging from already dead animals.[46]

Excavations at the Bnot Ya'akov Bridge site, located along the Dead Sea rift in the southern Hula Valley of northern Israel, have revealed evidence of human habitation in the area from as early as 750,000 years ago.[47] Archaeologists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem claim that the site provides evidence of "advanced human behavior" half a million years earlier than has previously been estimated. Their report describes an Acheulean layer at the site in which numerous stone tools, animal bones, and plant remains have been found.[48]

Azykh cave located in Azerbaijan is another site where Acheulean tools were found. In 1968, a lower jaw of a new type of hominid was discovered in the fifth layer (so-called Acheulean layer) of the cave. Specialists named this type "Azykhantropus".[49][50][51]

Only limited artefactual evidence survives of the users of Acheulean tools other than the stone tools themselves. Cave sites were exploited for habitation, but the hunter-gatherers of the Palaeolithic also possibly built shelters such as those identified in connection with Acheulean tools at Grotte du Lazaret[52] and Terra Amata near Nice in France. The presence of the shelters is inferred from large rocks at the sites, which may have been used to weigh down the bottoms of tent-like structures or serve as foundations for huts or windbreaks. These stones may have been naturally deposited. In any case, a flimsy wood or animal skin structure would leave few archaeological traces after so much time. Fire was seemingly being exploited by Homo ergaster, and would have been a necessity in colonising colder Eurasia from Africa. Conclusive evidence of mastery over it this early is, however, difficult to find.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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  43. ^ Tryon, Christian A.; McBrearty, Sally (January 2002). "Tephrostratigraphy and the Acheulian to Middle Stone Age transition in the Kapthurin Formation, Kenya". Journal of Human Evolution. 42 (1–2): 211–235. doi:10.1006/jhev.2001.0513. PMID 11795975.
  44. ^ Cruz-Uribe, Kathryn; Klein, Richard G; Avery, Graham; Avery, Margaret; Halkett, David; Hart, Timothy; Milo, Richard G; Garth Sampson, C; Volman, Thomas P (1 May 2003). "Excavation of buried Late Acheulean (Mid-Quaternary) land surfaces at Duinefontein 2, Western Cape Province, South Africa". Journal of Archaeological Science. 30 (5): 559–575. doi:10.1016/S0305-4403(02)00202-9.
  45. ^ Scarre, 2005, chapter 3, p118 "However, objects whose artistic meaning is unequivocal become commonplace only after 50,000 years ago, when they are associated with the origins and spread of fully modern humans from Africa.
  46. ^ ...the most conservative conclusion today is that Acheulean people and their contemporaries definitely hunted big animals, though their success rate is not clear ibid, p 120.
  47. ^ Gesher Benot Ya'aqov 2009-07-20 at the Wayback Machine, Hebrew University, Retrieved 2010-01-05.
  48. ^ Siegel-Itzkovich, Judy (December 22, 2009). "HU: Evidence of advanced human life half a million years earlier than previously thought". The Jerusalem Post.
  49. ^ Pavel Dolukhanov (2014). The Early Slavs: Eastern Europe from the Initial Settlement to the Kievan Rus. Routledge. ISBN 9781317892229.[page needed]
  50. ^ V.A. Zubakov, I.I. Borzenkova (1990). Global Palaeoclimate of the Late Cenozoic. Elsevier. ISBN 9780080868530.[page needed]
  51. ^ Ian Shaw, Robert Jameson, ed. (2008). A Dictionary of Archaeology. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470751961.[page needed]
  52. ^ De Lumley, 1975, Cultural evolution in France in its palaeoecological setting during the middle Pleistocene, in After the Australopithecines, Butzer, KW and Issac, G Ll. (eds) 745–808. The Hague:Mouton, qtd in Scarre, 2005

Sources edit

  • Adkins, L; and R (1998). The Handbook of British Archaeology. London: Constable. ISBN 978-0-09-478330-0.
  • Milliken, S; Cook, J, eds. (2001). A Very Remote Period Indeed. Papers on the Palaeolithic presented to Derek Roe. Oxford: Oxbow. ISBN 978-1-84217-056-4.
  • Wood, B (2005). Human Evolution A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280360-3.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Acheulean at Wikimedia Commons

acheulean, also, acheulian, mode, from, french, acheuléen, after, type, site, saint, acheul, archaeological, industry, stone, tool, manufacture, characterized, distinctive, oval, pear, shaped, hand, axes, associated, with, homo, erectus, derived, species, such. Acheulean e ˈ ʃ uː l i e n also Acheulian and Mode II from the French acheuleen after the type site of Saint Acheul is an archaeological industry of stone tool manufacture characterized by the distinctive oval and pear shaped hand axes associated with Homo erectus and derived species such as Homo heidelbergensis AcheuleanMap of the distribution of Middle Pleistocene Acheulean cleaver findsGeographical rangeAfrica Europe and AsiaPeriodLower PaleolithicDates1 95 0 13 MyaType siteSaint Acheul Amiens Preceded byOldowanFollowed byMousterian Clactonian Micoquien Aterian Soanian Sangoan Acheulo Yabrudian complex Fauresmith industryA cordiform biface as commonly found in the Acheulean replica Acheulean hand axes from Kent The types shown are clockwise from top cordate ficron and ovate citation needed Depiction of a Terra Amata hut in Nice France as postulated by Henry de Lumley dated to 400 thousand years ago 1 Acheulean tools were produced during the Lower Palaeolithic era across Africa and much of West Asia South Asia East Asia and Europe and are typically found with Homo erectus remains It is thought that Acheulean technologies first developed about 2 million years ago derived from the more primitive Oldowan technology associated with Homo habilis 2 The Acheulean includes at least the early part of the Middle Paleolithic Its end is not well defined depending on whether Sangoan also known as Epi Acheulean is included it may be taken to last until as late as 130 000 years ago In Europe and Western Asia early Neanderthals adopted Acheulean technology transitioning to Mousterian by about 160 000 years ago Contents 1 History of research 2 Dating the Acheulean 3 Acheulean stone tools 3 1 Stages 3 2 Manufacture 3 3 Use 3 3 1 Hand axe as a leftover core 3 3 2 Money 3 4 Distribution 4 Acheulean tool users 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 External linksHistory of research editThe type site for the Acheulean is Saint Acheul a suburb of Amiens the capital of the Somme department in Picardy where artifacts were found in 1859 3 John Frere is generally credited as being the first to suggest a very ancient date for Acheulean hand axes In 1797 he sent two examples to the Royal Academy in London from Hoxne in Suffolk He had found them in prehistoric lake deposits along with the bones of extinct animals and concluded that they were made by people who had not the use of metals and that they belonged to a very ancient period indeed even beyond the present world 4 His ideas were however ignored by his contemporaries who subscribed to a pre Darwinian view of human evolution citation needed Later Jacques Boucher de Crevecœur de Perthes working between 1836 and 1846 collected further examples of hand axes and fossilised animal bone from the gravel river terraces of the Somme near Abbeville in northern France Again his theories attributing great antiquity to the finds were spurned by his colleagues until one of de Perthes main opponents Marcel Jerome Rigollot began finding more tools near Saint Acheul Following visits to both Abbeville and Saint Acheul by the geologist Joseph Prestwich the age of the tools was finally accepted citation needed In 1872 Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet described the characteristic hand axe tools as belonging to L Epoque de St Acheul The industry was renamed as the Acheulean in 1925 citation needed Dating the Acheulean editProviding calendrical dates and ordered chronological sequences in the study of early stone tool manufacture is often accomplished through one or more geological techniques such as radiometric dating often potassium argon dating and magnetostratigraphy From the Konso Formation of Ethiopia Acheulean hand axes are dated to about 1 5 million years ago using radiometric dating of deposits containing volcanic ashes 5 Acheulean tools in South Asia have also been found to be dated as far as 1 5 million years ago 6 However in 2003 examples of the Acheulean from the West Turkana region of Kenya were described 7 which have been dated through the method of magnetostratigraphy to about 1 76 million years ago 8 and in 2023 finds from Ethiopia were reported dating to 1 95 million years ago 2 The earliest user of Acheulean tools may have been Homo ergaster who first appeared about 1 8 million years ago not all researchers use this formal name and instead prefer to call these users early Homo erectus 9 However it is impossible to know for sure whether Homo ergaster was the only maker of early Acheulean tools since other hominin species such as Homo habilis also lived in East Africa at this time 10 From geological dating of sedimentary deposits it appears that the Acheulean originated in Africa and spread to Asian Middle Eastern and European areas sometime between 1 5 million years ago and about 800 thousand years ago 11 12 In individual regions this dating can be considerably refined in Europe for example it was thought that Acheulean methods did not reach the continent until around 500 000 years ago However more recent research demonstrated that hand axes from Spain were made more than 900 000 years ago 12 Relative dating techniques based on a presumption that technology progresses over time suggest that Acheulean tools followed on from earlier cruder tool making methods but there is considerable chronological overlap in early prehistoric stone working industries with evidence in some regions that Acheulean tool using groups were contemporary with other less sophisticated industries such as the Clactonian 13 and then later with the more sophisticated Mousterian as well It is therefore important not to see the Acheulean as a neatly defined period or one that happened as part of a clear sequence but as one tool making technique that flourished especially well in early prehistory The enormous geographic spread of Acheulean techniques also makes the name unwieldy as it represents numerous regional variations on a similar theme The term Acheulean does not represent a common culture in the modern sense rather it is a basic method for making stone tools that was shared across much of the Old World citation needed The very earliest Acheulean assemblages often contain numerous Oldowan style flakes and core forms and it is almost certain that the Acheulean developed from this older industry These industries are known as the Developed Oldowan and are almost certainly transitional between the Oldowan and Acheulean citation needed Regionally subdivided end times of the Acheulean show that it persisted long after the diffusion of Middle Palaeolithic technologies in multiple continental regions and ended over 100 000 years apart in Africa and the Near East 175 166 kya in Europe 141 130 kya and in Asia 57 53 kya 14 15 Acheulean stone tools editStages edit nbsp An Acheulean handaxe Haute Garonne France MHNTIn the four divisions of prehistoric stone working 16 Acheulean artefacts are classified as Mode 2 meaning they are more advanced than the usually earlier Mode 1 tools of the Clactonian or Oldowan Abbevillian industries but lacking the sophistication of the usually later Mode 3 Middle Palaeolithic technology exemplified by the Mousterian industry citation needed The Mode 1 industries created rough flake tools by hitting a suitable stone with a hammerstone The resulting flake that broke off would have a natural sharp edge for cutting and could afterwards be sharpened further by striking another smaller flake from the edge if necessary known as retouch These early toolmakers may also have worked the stone they took the flake from known as a core to create chopper cores although there is some debate over whether these items were tools or just discarded cores 17 The Mode 2 Acheulean toolmakers also used the Mode 1 flake tool method but supplemented it by using bone antler or wood to shape stone tools This type of hammer compared to stone yields more control over the shape of the finished tool Unlike the earlier Mode 1 industries it was the core that was prized over the flakes that came from it Another advance was that the Mode 2 tools were worked symmetrically and on both sides indicating greater care in the production of the final tool citation needed Mode 3 technology emerged towards the end of Acheulean dominance and involved the Levallois technique most famously exploited by the Mousterian industry Transitional tool forms between the two are called Mousterian of Acheulean Tradition or MTA types The long blades of the Upper Palaeolithic Mode 4 industries appeared long after the Acheulean was abandoned citation needed As the period of Acheulean tool use is so vast efforts have been made to classify various stages of it such as John Wymer s division into Early Acheulean Middle Acheulean Late Middle Acheulean and Late Acheulean 18 for material from Britain These schemes are normally regional and their dating and interpretations vary 19 In Africa there is a distinct difference in the tools made before and after 600 000 years ago with the older group being thicker and less symmetric and the younger being more extensively trimmed 20 Manufacture edit The primary innovation associated with Acheulean hand axes is that the stone was worked symmetrically and on both sides For the latter reason handaxes are along with cleavers bifacially worked tools that could be manufactured from the large flakes themselves or from prepared cores 21 Tool types found in Acheulean assemblages include pointed cordate ovate ficron and bout coupe hand axes referring to the shapes of the final tool cleavers retouched flakes scrapers and segmental chopping tools Materials used were determined by available local stone types flint is most often associated with the tools but its use is concentrated in Western Europe in Africa sedimentary and igneous rock such as mudstone and basalt were most widely used for example Other source materials include chalcedony quartzite andesite sandstone chert and shale Even relatively soft rock such as limestone could be exploited 22 In all cases the toolmakers worked their handaxes close to the source of their raw materials suggesting that the Acheulean was a set of skills passed between individual groups 23 Some smaller tools were made from large flakes that had been struck from stone cores These flake tools and the distinctive waste flakes produced in Acheulean tool manufacture suggest a more considered technique one that required the toolmaker to think one or two steps ahead during work that necessitated a clear sequence of steps to create perhaps several tools in one sitting citation needed A hard hammerstone would first be used to rough out the shape of the tool from the stone by removing large flakes These large flakes might be re used to create tools The tool maker would work around the circumference of the remaining stone core removing smaller flakes alternately from each face The scar created by the removal of the preceding flake would provide a striking platform for the removal of the next Misjudged blows or flaws in the material used could cause problems but a skilled toolmaker could overcome them citation needed Once the roughout shape was created a further phase of flaking was undertaken to make the tool thinner The thinning flakes were removed using a softer hammer such as bone or antler The softer hammer required more careful preparation of the striking platform and this would be abraded using a coarse stone to ensure the hammer did not slide off when struck citation needed Final shaping was then applied to the usable cutting edge of the tool again using fine removal of flakes Some Acheulean tools were sharpened instead by the removal of a tranchet flake This was struck from the lateral edge of the hand axe close to the intended cutting area resulting in the removal of a flake running along parallel to the blade of the axe to create a neat and very sharp working edge This distinctive tranchet flake can be identified amongst flint knapping debris at Acheulean sites citation needed Use edit nbsp Acheulean hand axe from Egypt Found on a hill top plateau 1400 feet above sea level nine miles northwest of the city of Naqada Egypt Paleolithic artifact displayed in the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology of London Loren Eiseley calculated 24 that Acheulean tools have an average useful cutting edge of 20 centimetres 8 inches making them much more efficient than the 5 centimetre 2 in average of Oldowan tools citation needed Use wear analysis on Acheulean tools suggests there was generally no specialization in the different types created and that they were multi use implements Functions included hacking wood from a tree cutting animal carcasses as well as scraping and cutting hides when necessary Some tools however could have been better suited to digging roots or butchering animals than others citation needed Alternative theories include a use for ovate hand axes as a kind of hunting discus to be hurled at prey 25 Puzzlingly there are also examples of sites where hundreds of hand axes many impractically large and also apparently unused have been found in close association together Sites such as Melka Kunture in Ethiopia Olorgesailie in Kenya Isimila in Tanzania and Kalambo Falls in Zambia have produced evidence that suggests Acheulean hand axes might not always have had a functional purpose citation needed Recently it has been suggested 26 that the Acheulean tool users adopted the handaxe as a social artifact meaning that it embodied something beyond its function of a butchery or wood cutting tool Knowing how to create and use these tools would have been a valuable skill and the more elaborate ones suggest that they played a role in their owners identity and their interactions with others This would help explain the apparent over sophistication of some examples which may represent a historically accrued social significance 27 One theory goes further and suggests that some special hand axes were made and displayed by males in search of a mate using a large well made hand axe to demonstrate that they possessed sufficient strength and skill to pass on to their offspring Once they had attracted a female at a group gathering it is suggested that they would discard their axes perhaps explaining why so many are found together 28 This popular sexual selection hypothesis is controversial due to the assumptions made about sexual selection among extinct organisms 29 Hand axe as a leftover core edit Stone knapping with limited digital dexterity makes the center of mass the required direction of flake removal Physics then dictates a circular or oval end pattern similar to the handaxe for a leftover core after flake production This would explain the abundance wide distribution proximity to source consistent shape and lack of actual use of these artifacts 30 additional citation s needed Money edit Mimi Lam a researcher from the University of British Columbia has suggested that Acheulean hand axes became the first commodity A marketable good or service that has value and is used as an item for exchange 31 Distribution edit nbsp nbsp Xiaochangliang nbsp Zhoukoudian nbsp Yuanmou County nbsp Koobi Fora nbsp Richat Structure nbsp Sterkfontein nbsp Saint Acheul nbsp Bose Basinclass notpageimage Map of Afro Eurasia showing important sites of the Acheulean industry clickable map The geographic distribution of Acheulean tools and thus the peoples who made them is often interpreted as being the result of palaeo climatic and ecological factors such as glaciation and the desertification of the Sahara Desert 32 nbsp Acheulean Biface from Saint AcheulAcheulean stone tools have been found across the continent of Africa save for the dense rainforest around the River Congo which is not thought to have been colonized by hominids until later It is thought that from Africa their use spread north and east to Asia from Anatolia through the Arabian Peninsula across modern day Iran 33 and Pakistan and into India and beyond In Europe their users reached the Pannonian Basin and the western Mediterranean regions modern day France the Low Countries western Germany and southern and central Britain Areas further north did not see human occupation until much later due to glaciation In Athirampakkam at Chennai in Tamil Nadu the Acheulean age started at 1 51 mya and it is also prior than North India and Europe 34 Until the 1980s it was thought that the humans who arrived in East Asia abandoned the hand axe technology of their ancestors and adopted chopper tools instead An apparent division between Acheulean and non Acheulean tool industries was identified by Hallam L Movius who drew the Movius Line across northern India to show where the traditions seemed to diverge Later finds of Acheulean tools at Chongokni in South Korea and also in Mongolia and China however cast doubt on the reliability of Movius s distinction 35 Since then a different division known as the Roe Line has been suggested This runs across North Africa to Israel and thence to India separating two different techniques used by Acheulean toolmakers North and east of the Roe Line Acheulean hand axes were made directly from large stone nodules and cores while to the south and west they were made from flakes struck from these nodules 36 nbsp Biface trihedral Amar Merdeg Mehran National Museum of IranAcheulean tool users editFor further details of the known environment and people during the time when Acheulean tools were being made see Palaeolithic and Lower Palaeolithic Most notably however it is Homo ergaster sometimes called early Homo erectus whose assemblages are almost exclusively Acheulean who used the technique Later the related species Homo heidelbergensis the common ancestor of both Neanderthals and Homo sapiens used it extensively citation needed Late Acheulean tools were still used by species derived from H erectus including Homo sapiens idaltu and early Neanderthals 37 The symmetry of the hand axes has been used to suggest that Acheulean tool users possessed the ability to use language 38 the parts of the brain connected with fine control and movement are located in the same region that controls speech The wider variety of tool types compared to earlier industries and their aesthetically as well as functionally pleasing form could indicate a higher intellectual level in Acheulean tool users than in earlier hominines 39 Others argue that there is no correlation between spatial abilities in tool making and linguistic behaviour and that language is not learned or conceived in the same manner as artefact manufacture 40 Lower Palaeolithic finds made in association with Acheulean hand axes such as the Venus of Berekhat Ram 41 have been used to argue for artistic expression amongst the tool users The incised elephant tibia from Bilzingsleben 42 in Germany and ochre finds from Kapthurin in Kenya 43 and Duinefontein in South Africa 44 are sometimes cited as being some of the earliest examples of an aesthetic sensibility in human history There are numerous other explanations put forward for the creation of these artefacts however evidence of human art did not become commonplace until around 50 000 years ago after the emergence of modern Homo sapiens 45 The kill site at Boxgrove in England is another famous Acheulean site Up until the 1970s these kill sites often at waterholes where animals would gather to drink were interpreted as being where Acheulean tool users killed game butchered their carcasses and then discarded the tools they had used Since the advent of zooarchaeology which has placed greater emphasis on studying animal bones from archaeological sites this view has changed Many of the animals at these kill sites have been found to have been killed by other predator animals so it is likely that humans of the period supplemented hunting with scavenging from already dead animals 46 Excavations at the Bnot Ya akov Bridge site located along the Dead Sea rift in the southern Hula Valley of northern Israel have revealed evidence of human habitation in the area from as early as 750 000 years ago 47 Archaeologists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem claim that the site provides evidence of advanced human behavior half a million years earlier than has previously been estimated Their report describes an Acheulean layer at the site in which numerous stone tools animal bones and plant remains have been found 48 Azykh cave located in Azerbaijan is another site where Acheulean tools were found In 1968 a lower jaw of a new type of hominid was discovered in the fifth layer so called Acheulean layer of the cave Specialists named this type Azykhantropus 49 50 51 Only limited artefactual evidence survives of the users of Acheulean tools other than the stone tools themselves Cave sites were exploited for habitation but the hunter gatherers of the Palaeolithic also possibly built shelters such as those identified in connection with Acheulean tools at Grotte du Lazaret 52 and Terra Amata near Nice in France The presence of the shelters is inferred from large rocks at the sites which may have been used to weigh down the bottoms of tent like structures or serve as foundations for huts or windbreaks These stones may have been naturally deposited In any case a flimsy wood or animal skin structure would leave few archaeological traces after so much time Fire was seemingly being exploited by Homo ergaster and would have been a necessity in colonising colder Eurasia from Africa Conclusive evidence of mastery over it this early is however difficult to find citation needed See also editHand axe Lithic reduction Lower Palaeolithic Ndutu cranium Oldowan Palaeolithic Stone Age Stone toolsReferences editCitations edit Musee de Prehistoire Terra Amata Le site acheuleen de Terra Amata The Acheulean site of Terra Amata Musee de Prehistoire Terra Amata in French Retrieved 10 June 2022 a b Margherita Mussi et al Oct 12 2023 Early Homo erectus lived at high altitudes and produced both Oldowan and Acheulean tools Science doi 10 1126 science add9115 Oxford English Dictionary 2nd Ed 1989 Frere John nbsp Account of Flint Weapons Discovered at Hoxne in Suffolk Archaeologia 13 1800 204 205 reprinted in Grayson 1983 55 56 and Heizer 1962 70 71 Asfaw Berhane Beyene Yonas Suwa Gen Walter Robert C White Tim D WoldeGabriel Giday Yemane Tesfaye December 1992 The earliest Acheulean from Konso Gardula Nature 360 6406 732 735 Bibcode 1992Natur 360 732A doi 10 1038 360732a0 PMID 1465142 S2CID 4341455 Pappu Shanti Gunnell Yanni Akhilesh Kumar Braucher Regis Taieb Maurice Demory Francois Thouveny Nicolas 25 March 2011 Early Pleistocene Presence of Acheulian Hominins in South India Science 331 6024 1596 1599 Bibcode 2011Sci 331 1596P doi 10 1126 science 1200183 PMID 21436450 S2CID 206531024 Roche Helene Brugal Jean Philip Delagnes Anne Feibel Craig Harmand Sonia Kibunjia Mzalendo Prat Sandrine Texier Pierre Jean December 2003 Les sites archeologiques plio pleistocenes de la formation de Nachukui Ouest Turkana Kenya bilan synthetique 1997 2001 Comptes Rendus Palevol 2 8 663 673 doi 10 1016 j crpv 2003 06 001 Lepre Christopher J Roche Helene Kent Dennis V Harmand Sonia Quinn Rhonda L Brugal Jean Philippe Texier Pierre Jean Lenoble Arnaud Feibel Craig S September 2011 An earlier origin for the Acheulian Nature 477 7362 82 85 Bibcode 2011Natur 477 82L doi 10 1038 nature10372 PMID 21886161 S2CID 4419567 Wood 2005 p 87 Rightmire G Philip 1993 Variation among early Homo crania from Olduvai Gorge and the Koobi Fora region American Journal of Physical Anthropology 90 1 1 33 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330900102 ISSN 1096 8644 PMID 8470752 Goren Inbar N Feibel C S Verosub K L Melamed Y Kislev M E Tchernov E Saragusti I 2000 Pleistocene Milestones on the Out of Africa Corridor at Gesher Benot Ya aqov Israel Science 289 5481 944 947 Bibcode 2000Sci 289 944G doi 10 1126 science 289 5481 944 PMID 10937996 a b Scott Gary R Gibert Luis September 2009 The oldest hand axes in Europe Nature 461 7260 82 85 Bibcode 2009Natur 461 82S doi 10 1038 nature08214 PMID 19727198 S2CID 205217591 Ashton Nick McNabb John Irving Brian Lewis Simon Parfitt Simon 2 January 2015 Contemporaneity of Clactonian and Acheulian flint industries at Barnham Suffolk Antiquity 68 260 585 589 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00047074 S2CID 162146330 Neanderthal and early modern human stone tool culture co existed for over 100 000 years phys org Retrieved 18 April 2021 Key Alastair J M Jaric Ivan Roberts David L 2 March 2021 Modelling the end of the Acheulean at global and continental levels suggests widespread persistence into the Middle Palaeolithic Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 8 1 1 12 doi 10 1057 s41599 021 00735 8 ISSN 2662 9992 Barton RNE Stone Age Britain English Heritage BT Batsford London 1997 qtd in Butler 2005 See also Wymer JJ The Lower Palaeolithic Occupation of Britain Wessex Archaeology and English Heritage 1999 Ashton NM McNabb J and Parfitt S Choppers and the Clactonian a reinvestigation Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 58 pp21 28 qtd in Butler 2005 Wymer JJ 1968 Lower Palaeolithic Archaeology in Britain as represented by the Thames Valley qtd in Adkins L and R 1998 Collins D 1978 Early Man in West Middlesex qtd in Adkins L and R 1998 Stout Dietrich Apel Jan Commander Julia Roberts Mark January 2014 Late Acheulean technology and cognition at Boxgrove UK Journal of Archaeological Science 41 576 590 doi 10 1016 j jas 2013 10 001 Barham Lawrence Mitchell Peter 2008 The First Africans 1st ed Cambridge University Press p 16 ISBN 978 0 521 61265 4 Paddayya K Jhaldiyal Richa Petraglia M D 2 January 2015 Excavation of an Acheulian workshop at Isampur Karnataka India Antiquity 74 286 751 752 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00060269 S2CID 162905484 Gamble C and Steele J 1999 Hominid ranging patterns and dietary strategies in Ullrich H ed Hominid evolution lifestyles and survival strategies pp 396 409 Gelsenkirchen Edition Archaea Unattributed citation in Renfrew and Bahn 1991 p277 O Brien Eileen M February 1981 The Projectile Capabilities of an Acheulian Handaxe From Olorgesailie Current Anthropology 22 1 76 79 doi 10 1086 202607 S2CID 144098416 See also Calvin W 1993 The unitary hypothesis a common neural circuitry for novel manipulations language plan ahead and throwing in K R Gibson amp T Ingold ed Tools language and cognition in human evolution 230 50 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Gamble C 1997 Handaxes and palaeolithic individuals in N Ashton F Healey amp P Pettitt ed Stone Age archaeology 105 9 Oxford Oxbow Books Monograph 102 White Mark J 18 February 2014 On the Significance of Acheulean Biface Variability in Southern Britain Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 64 15 44 doi 10 1017 S0079497X00002164 S2CID 129110686 Kohn Marek Mithen Steven 2 January 2015 Handaxes products of sexual selection Antiquity 73 281 518 526 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00065078 S2CID 162903453 Nowell April Chang Melanie 2009 The Case Against Sexual Selection as an Explanation of Handaxe Morphology PDF PaleoAnthropology 77 88 Retrieved 20 May 2023 The Acheulean Handaxe Welsh Jennifer 1 March 2012 Tools May Have Been First Money LiveScience Todd Lawrence Glantz Michelle Kappelman John 2 January 2015 Chilga Kernet an Acheulean landscape on Ethiopia s western plateau Antiquity 76 293 611 612 doi 10 1017 S0003598X0009089X S2CID 162604558 Biglari Fereidoun Shidrang Sonia September 2006 The Lower Paleolithic Occupation of Iran Near Eastern Archaeology 69 3 4 160 168 doi 10 1086 NEA25067668 S2CID 166438498 Prasad R 24 March 2011 Acheulian stone tools discovered near Chennai The Hindu Hyeong Woo Lee The Palaeolithic industries of Korea chronology and related new findspots in Milliken S and Cook J eds 2001 Gamble C and Marshall G The shape of handaxes the structure of the Acheulian world in Milliken S and Cook J eds 2001 Clark J Desmond Beyene Yonas WoldeGabriel Giday Hart William K Renne Paul R Gilbert Henry Defleur Alban Suwa Gen Katoh Shigehiro Ludwig Kenneth R Boisserie Jean Renaud Asfaw Berhane White Tim D June 2003 Stratigraphic chronological and behavioural contexts of Pleistocene Homo sapiens from Middle Awash Ethiopia Nature 423 6941 747 752 Bibcode 2003Natur 423 747C doi 10 1038 nature01670 PMID 12802333 S2CID 4312418 Isaac Glynn L October 1976 Stages of Cultural Elaboration in the Pleistocene Possible Archaeological Indicators of the Development of Language Capabilities Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 280 1 Origins and E 275 288 Bibcode 1976NYASA 280 275I doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1976 tb25494 x S2CID 84642536 Wynn Thomas June 1995 Handaxe enigmas World Archaeology 27 1 10 24 doi 10 1080 00438243 1995 9980290 Dibble HL 1989 The implications of stone tool types for the presenceof language during the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic in The Human Revolution P Mellars and C Stringer eds Edinburgh University Press qtd in Renfrew and Bahn 1991 Goren Inbar N and Peltz S 1995 Additional remarks on the Berekhat Ram figure Rock Art Research 12 131 132 qtd in Scarre 2005 Mania D and Mania U 1988 Deliberate engravings on bone artefacts of Homo Erectus Rock Art Research 5 919 7 qtd in Scarre 2005 Tryon Christian A McBrearty Sally January 2002 Tephrostratigraphy and the Acheulian to Middle Stone Age transition in the Kapthurin Formation Kenya Journal of Human Evolution 42 1 2 211 235 doi 10 1006 jhev 2001 0513 PMID 11795975 Cruz Uribe Kathryn Klein Richard G Avery Graham Avery Margaret Halkett David Hart Timothy Milo Richard G Garth Sampson C Volman Thomas P 1 May 2003 Excavation of buried Late Acheulean Mid Quaternary land surfaces at Duinefontein 2 Western Cape Province South Africa Journal of Archaeological Science 30 5 559 575 doi 10 1016 S0305 4403 02 00202 9 Scarre 2005 chapter 3 p118 However objects whose artistic meaning is unequivocal become commonplace only after 50 000 years ago when they are associated with the origins and spread of fully modern humans from Africa the most conservative conclusion today is that Acheulean people and their contemporaries definitely hunted big animals though their success rate is not clear ibid p 120 Gesher Benot Ya aqov Archived 2009 07 20 at the Wayback Machine Hebrew University Retrieved 2010 01 05 Siegel Itzkovich Judy December 22 2009 HU Evidence of advanced human life half a million years earlier than previously thought The Jerusalem Post Pavel Dolukhanov 2014 The Early Slavs Eastern Europe from the Initial Settlement to the Kievan Rus Routledge ISBN 9781317892229 page needed V A Zubakov I I Borzenkova 1990 Global Palaeoclimate of the Late Cenozoic Elsevier ISBN 9780080868530 page needed Ian Shaw Robert Jameson ed 2008 A Dictionary of Archaeology John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780470751961 page needed De Lumley 1975 Cultural evolution in France in its palaeoecological setting during the middle Pleistocene in After the Australopithecines Butzer KW and Issac G Ll eds 745 808 The Hague Mouton qtd in Scarre 2005 Sources edit Adkins L and R 1998 The Handbook of British Archaeology London Constable ISBN 978 0 09 478330 0 Butler C 2005 Prehistoric Flintwork Tempus Stroud ISBN 978 0 7524 3340 0 Milliken S Cook J eds 2001 A Very Remote Period Indeed Papers on the Palaeolithic presented to Derek Roe Oxford Oxbow ISBN 978 1 84217 056 4 Renfrew C and P Bahn 1991 Archaeology Theories Methods and Practice London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 27605 1 Scarre C ed 2005 The Human Past London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28531 2 Wood B 2005 Human Evolution A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280360 3 External links edit nbsp Look up Acheulean in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Acheulean at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Acheulean amp oldid 1191331808, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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