Stone tool approximately 1.2 million years old. |
Scientists have discovered the oldest recorded stone tool ever to be
found in Turkey, revealing that humans passed through the gateway from
Asia to Europe much earlier than previously thought, approximately 1.2
million years ago.
According to research published in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews,
the chance find of a humanly-worked quartzite flake, in ancient
deposits of the river Gediz, in western Turkey, provides a major new
insight into when and how early humans dispersed out of Africa and Asia.
Researchers from Royal Holloway, University of London, together with
an international team from the UK, Turkey and the Netherlands, used
high-precision equipment to date the deposits of the ancient river
meander, giving the first accurate timeframe for when humans occupied
the area.
Professor Danielle Schreve, from the Department of Geography at Royal
Holloway, said: "This discovery is critical for establishing the timing
and route of early human dispersal into Europe. Our research suggests
that the flake is the earliest securely-dated artefact from Turkey ever
recorded and was dropped on the floodplain by an early hominin well over
a million years ago."
The researchers used high-precision radioisotopic dating and
palaeomagnetic measurements from lava flows, which both pre-date and
post-date the meander, to establish that early humans were present in
the area between approximately 1.24 million and 1.17 million years ago.
Previously, the oldest hominin fossils in western Turkey were recovered
in 2007 at Koçabas, but the dating of these and other stone tool finds
were uncertain.
"The flake was an incredibly exciting find," Professor Schreve said.
"I had been studying the sediments in the meander bend and my eye was
drawn to a pinkish stone on the surface. When I turned it over for a
better look, the features of a humanly-struck artefact were immediately
apparent.
"By working together with geologists and dating specialists, we have
been able to put a secure chronology to this find and shed new light on
the behaviour of our most distant ancestors."
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