• Why blade technology was developed

    From Mario Petrinovic@mario.petrinovic1@zg.htnet.hr to sci.anthropology.paleo on Mon Feb 24 02:56:50 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo

    Only the first 30 seconds of the video are important: https://youtu.be/cL3nWqvzfow?si=fz6wc48MFo36Bbbg
    Literally there are *no* other purposes for blade technology, even
    today. On the other hand, this particular job *demands* blades, because
    you cannot cut one by one stem, the only senseful thing to do is to cut
    them in a sheaf. And blade technology is ancient, I believe that they
    have evidence 700ky - 800ky old.
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  • From JTEM@jtem01@gmail.com to sci.anthropology.paleo on Mon Feb 24 00:57:31 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo

    On 2/23/25 8:56 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    -a-a-a-a-a-a-a Only the first 30 seconds of the video are important: https://youtu.be/cL3nWqvzfow?si=fz6wc48MFo36Bbbg
    -a-a-a-a-a-a-a Literally there are *no* other purposes for blade technology,
    even today. On the other hand, this particular job *demands* blades,
    because you cannot cut one by one stem, the only senseful thing to do is
    to cut them in a sheaf. And blade technology is ancient, I believe that
    they have evidence 700ky - 800ky old.

    That is a ridiculously arduous & complex task compared to using a
    sharp edge to cut away some meat.

    But I don't even think that was the start.

    No, it probably started with using a shell (half a shellfish) to
    pry open a new one to eat.

    There is a half-a-million year old shell with lines scratched onto
    it that look deliberate. At the very least that puts something
    sharp together with shellfish... for certain.

    Chimps are NOT an analog for human ancestors but there is some
    overlap, and Chimps never bother with "Tools." They rip the
    flesh apart and eat it raw.

    Seafood is eaten raw all the time, meat is even eaten raw in many
    cultures and certain was in the past. So anything approximating
    the sophistication of a Chimp didn't need tools, didn't need fire.

    But...

    Opening shellfish would be oodles easier with something slim &
    "Sharp" to pry between the two halves.

    And when fire arose, it would make things even easier. The fire
    would open the shellfish -- if they didn't open they were no
    good to eat -- and hence what was unnecessary became habit and
    eventually came the physical adaptations. So, what happened to
    the blades to pry open the shells?

    Some individual/groups followed fresh water sources inland and
    adapted to the new environment. When they did they brought their
    blades or the concept with them. And as new arrivals periodically
    arrived, adding their DNA to the inland gene pool, they kept the
    connection to the Waterside population and their tools alive.

    Yes, the inland groups were very successful, spread out, began
    to occupy and exploit new niche environments. The further they
    got from the entry point -- the Horn of Africa/Rift Valley --
    the less infusion of Waterside DNA they received... the more &
    more their evolution was dictated by their immediate surroundings.

    They became the dumb Chimps.
    --
    https://jtem.tumblr.com/tagged/The%20Book%20of%20JTEM/page/5
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