Stone tools found in India push back human migration timeline

Press Trust of India  |  Melbourne 

Archaeologists have discovered a haul of stone in dating back about 385,000 years ago, which suggest that early humans may have left much earlier than previously believed. Researchers found over 7,000 stone showing a distinct upgrade in stone-shaping techniques, including advanced blades, points and scrapers. The findings, published in the journal Nature, suggest that modern stone were being made in 250,000 years earlier than previously thought. The may have been made by an archaic species of hominin, rather than modern humans, researchers said. According to from the University of in Australia, the earliest evidence for modern humans was found in and dated between 281,000 and 349,000 years old. "The date of modern human migration from is always being pushed back," Clarkson said. In 1999, archaeologists Kumar Akhilesh and Shanti Pappu from the for Heritage Education in began excavating the Attirampakkam They uncovered more than 7,000 stone along the way, 'ABC News' reported. The haul contained produced by a more advanced method typical of Middle culture, known as the Levallois technique, Pappu said. The researchers said that the newly discovered stone are the oldest Middle artifacts known from by far. Previously discovered Indian Middle artifacts have been dated to about 140,000 to 46,000 years ago. A revised date of 385,000 years suggests a Middle Stone Age culture emerged in about the same time it developed in and Africa, Pappu said. Outside Africa, the oldest modern human fossil was a partial jaw bone found in It was dated to about 185,000 years old, according to researchers.

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First Published: Thu, February 01 2018. 17:20 IST