• Who made the Oldowan? Reviewing African hominin fossils and archaeological sites 3.5 mya

    From Primum Sapienti@invalide@invalid.invalid to sci.anthropology.paleo on Sun May 25 23:23:41 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo


    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0278416525000492
    Who made the Oldowan? Reviewing African
    hominin fossils and archaeological sites
    from 3.5 million years ago

    Abstract
    The question of which African hominin taxon/taxa
    was responsible for producing Oldowan stone tools
    has persisted for nearly a century. Homo habilis,
    Paranthropus boisei, Homo erectus,
    Australopithecus garhi, and Australopithecus
    africanus, among others, have been proposed as
    candidates, but we have never had a definitive
    answer to rCywho made the OldowanrCO. We review the
    hominin taxa that overlap temporally with the
    Oldowan, and use optimal linear estimation
    modeling to estimate first and last appearance
    dates for each taxon and the Oldowan. These
    modeled temporal trends suggest the Oldowan
    emerged c. 3.25 Ma lasting until either 1.6 or
    1.2 Ma, a time span that would make the Oldowan
    the longest-lived human cultural tradition. The
    modeled emergence of the Homo genus and
    extinction of early Homo coincide well with the
    first and last appearance dates of the Oldowan,
    but there is also considerable temporal overlap
    between the Oldowan and other hominin taxa,
    particularly Paranthropus boisei. Early members
    of the Homo genus remain the principal candidate
    for making and using the Oldowan throughout its
    shorter modeled temporal range (c. 3.25rCo1.6 Ma),
    and, if the Oldowan was produced until 1.2 Ma,
    P. boisei is the prime candidate for producing
    these later artifacts.

    "Based on their direct or inferred association
    with Oldowan stone tools at a few sites (Toth
    and Schick 2018) the main contenders for
    producing Oldowan tools are early Homo
    (including H. habilis and Homo rudolfensis), Homo
    erectus/ergaster, P. boisei, and Paranthropus
    robustus. However, these sites are not rCysmoking
    gunsrCO (sensu Cleland, 2013), and the principle of
    equifinality and the rCypoltergeist of the
    unpreservedrCO (Conrad et al. 2023) reduces their
    explanatory power (Hammond and Mongle 2023)."

    "Considering these results, and the current
    spatial distribution of Oldowan and hominin
    fossil sites, it is unlikely that one taxon
    created all Oldowan artifacts. Given that early
    members of the Homo genus are most closely
    associated with the Oldowan in time and space
    (modeled and known sites), it is likely they
    created the Oldowan through most of its
    temporal range. Artifacts were also likely made
    by additional taxa, of which P. boisei is the
    strongest contender."

    "Our models indicate overlap between up to 15
    hominin taxa and the modeled span of the
    Oldowan, extending from c. 3.25 Ma to either
    1.6 or 1.2 Ma, depending on the whether young,
    outlying Oldowan sites from Koobi Fora are
    included. If the longer temporal range is
    accepted, the Oldowan becomes the longest-lived
    known human cultural tradition, lasting for over
    two million years."


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