This ancient stick may be the world’s oldest handheld wooden tool

Tool News

This ancient stick may be the world’s oldest handheld wooden tool
United States Latest News,United States Headlines
  • 📰 ScienceNews
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 151 sec. here
  • 4 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 64%
  • Publisher: 63%

These 430,000-year-old wooden tools from Greece are a rare find and provide a glimpse at the technical know-how of our early human ancestors.

ever found. The objects, from 430,000 years ago, indicate early human ancestors were using wood for tools, weapons and maybe shelters. Our team was “so lucky, incredibly lucky” to have found objects like this, says paleolithic archaeologist Annemieke Milks of the University of Reading in England.

Wood usually rots quickly, she says, but it was preserved at an ancient site in what’s now the Peloponnese Peninsula of Greece. That’s because the ground there was heavily waterlogged when the objects were made and because they were buried so deep — about 30 meters down, Milks and colleagues report January 26 inThe objects are among thousands of pieces of wood, bone and stone recovered from a lignite mine at Marathousa, near the center of the peninsula. The site was an ancient lakeshore when the tools were made but it has since dried up. The discovery is one of several in recent years that have given scientists a new understanding of our ancestors’ use of wooden tools over hundreds of thousands of years. Milks and her colleagues show that the stick, which was found in four pieces, was worked to remove branches and to create a handle. The tool is 81 centimeters long. Use-wear analysis indicates it was used for digging, while geomagnetic and other analyses have confirmed the dating. Milks thinks the stick was fashioned from a thin alder trunk, but it has been so badly squashed that it is difficult to tell. The second wooden tool is more mysterious. Less than eight centimeters long and made of willow, it has clearly been shaped for some reason, but its purpose is unknown. It may have been used with some of the ancient stone or bone tools found at the site, to “finish off” work on another object, Milks says. The second tool is less than eight centimeters long and was made from a willow tree. Its purpose is unknown. Here, it is seen from four sides.The second tool is less than eight centimeters long and was made from a willow tree. Its purpose is unknown. Here, it is seen from four sides.Because they rot quickly, wooden artifacts are rare. In 2019, scientists found shaped logs at Zambia’s Kalambo Falls theydated to 780,000 years ago was found on the banks of the Jordan River. The archaeologist who led that excavation, Naama Goren-Inbar of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, says that the object was part of a handheld tool, but both ends are now broken off, making that hard to confirm. These finds hint at the wooden technologies once used by hominids but now lost, says anthropologist Bruce Hardy of Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio. Neandertals, in particular, made tools and other objects from wood and plants. His own work includes research into a“We’re finding only a very small amount of the material culture that was made by these peoples, because it’s all perishable,” Hardy says. “This is one of the areas where we can learn more new stuff, by finding and analyzing these perishable materials.” Archaeologist Larry Barham of the University of Liverpool in England, who made the discoveries at Kalambo Falls, laments that so few wooden artifacts from humanity’s distant past have survived. “We are missing so much from the archaeological record of people’s day-to-day lives,” he says. The new finds give scientists a rare glimpse of what once was.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

ScienceNews /  🏆 286. in US

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Sam Darnold could be 'seeing ghosts' again if Rams stick to usual game planSam Darnold could be 'seeing ghosts' again if Rams stick to usual game planIf the Rams are going to punch their ticket to this Super Bowl, their defense doesn’t need to reinvent itself.
Read more »

At 100 years old, Filipino World War II veteran's service and fight for recognition endureAt 100 years old, Filipino World War II veteran's service and fight for recognition endureOn his day of celebration, we learned of Idelfonso Quibin's duty, his sacrifice and his fight to make sure what he and his fellow servicemen did will never be forgotten.
Read more »

Free solo climber Alex Honnold conquers one of the world’s tallest buildingsFree solo climber Alex Honnold conquers one of the world’s tallest buildingsFor 92 minutes on a clear Sunday morning in Taipei, thousands of spectators with jittery nerves stared upwards, while people across the world were glued to their screens, as famed climber Alex Honnold made a death-defying attempt to scale one of the tallest skyscrapers on Earth.
Read more »

World Health Organization says US withdrawal makes the nation and the world 'less safe'World Health Organization says US withdrawal makes the nation and the world 'less safe'Fox News Channel offers its audiences in-depth news reporting, along with opinion and analysis encompassing the principles of free people, free markets and diversity of thought, as an alternative to the left-of-center offerings of the news marketplace.
Read more »

Super Bowl 60 Matchup Provides Ugly Measuring Stick for 2025 PanthersSuper Bowl 60 Matchup Provides Ugly Measuring Stick for 2025 PanthersThe Panthers already played both Super Bowl teams.
Read more »

430,000-Year-Old Stick Found in Greece Among Humanity's Oldest Wooden Tools430,000-Year-Old Stick Found in Greece Among Humanity's Oldest Wooden ToolsThe Best in Science News and Amazing Breakthroughs
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-04-01 17:58:08