Abstract

Activities attested since at least 2.6 Myr, such as stone knapping, marrow extraction, and woodworking may have allowed early hominins to recognize the technological potential of discarded skeletal remains and equipped them with a transferable skillset fit for the marginal modification and utilization of bone flakes. Identifying precisely when and where expedient bone tools were used in prehistory nonetheless remains a challenging task owing to the multiple natural and anthropogenic processes that can mimic deliberately knapped bones. Here, we compare a large sample of the faunal remains from Lingjing, a 115 ka-old site from China which has yielded important hominin remains and rich faunal and lithic assemblages, with bone fragments produced by experimentally fracturing Equus caballus long bones. Our results provide a set of qualitative and quantitative criteria that can help zooarchaeologists and bone technologists distinguish faunal remains with intentional flake removal scars from those resulting from carcass processing activities. Experimental data shows marrow extraction seldom generates diaphyseal fragments bearing more than six flake scars arranged contiguously or in interspersed series. Long bone fragments presenting such characteristics can, therefore, be interpreted as being purposefully knapped to be used as expediency tools. The identification, based on the above experimental criteria, of 56 bone tools in the Lingjing faunal assemblage is consistent with the smaller size of the lithics found in the same layer. The continuity gradient observed in the size of lithics and knapped bones suggests the latter were used for tasks in which the former were less or not effective.

Highlights

  • Owing to their ubiquity in the archaeological record since 3.3 Myr [1, 2], stone tools have attracted much attention in studies of the technological changes associated with the evolution of members of our lineage

  • Our results suggest at least 56 faunal fragments can be interpreted as expedient bone tools, which expands the behavioural realm of the hominins who visited the Lingjing site during the Middle to Late Pleistocene transition

  • We extend the approach proposed by these authors with the aim to distinguish between intentionally modified expedient osseous tools and marrow exploitation by-products from the Lingjing site, Henan, China

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Summary

Introduction

Owing to their ubiquity in the archaeological record since 3.3 Myr (million years ago) [1, 2], stone tools have attracted much attention in studies of the technological changes associated with the evolution of members of our lineage. Expedient bone technology at Lingjing, China org/-Le-programme-Cai-Yuanpei-1628-), the Talents Program of the Initiative d’Excellence (IdEx) of the Bordeaux University (https://idex.ubordeaux.fr/fr/), and the Research Council of Norway through its Centre’s of Excellence funding scheme, SFF Centre for Early Sapiens Behaviour (SapienCE), project number 262618 PACEA (UMR5199 CNRS) is a Partner team of the Labex LaScArBxANR n ANR-10-LABX-52 (https://lascarbx.labex.ubordeaux.fr/). The funders had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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