According to archaeologists, you’re looking at tools made 480,000 years ago by an extinct human ancestor. These tools represent the oldest known bone tools ever found in Europe and give an incredible view of the habits of a half-a-million-year-old human-like species.
The findings were made in 1989 when archaeologists from the UCL Institute of Archaeology embarked on a dig at Boxgrove, West Sussex, in southeast England, but have now been released with incredible pictures and details in a new book, The Horse Butchery Site.
Nicknamed the "Horse Butchery Site," the site is part of a multi-area dig that yielded astonishing artifacts. Bone tools, a butchered horse carcass, and over 2,000 shards of flint were among the historically significant pieces found belonging to an early species of human ancestors, thought to be Homo heidelbergensis. This human subspecies roamed Europe and Africa 700,000-200,000 years ago. The researchers believe a small group of young adults had gathered around the area to prepare a butchered horse in a hunting party of sorts.
The bone tools found here represent some of the earliest organic tools ever found. It is believed they were used to prepare carcasses and shape flint into sharp tools, explaining the thousands of tiny flint shards. Preserved prints of humanoid knees mark what are believed to be areas that members of the community would strike large pieces of flint with a bone axe, or ‘knap’ them, to create the tools.
"These are some of the earliest non-stone tools found in the archaeological record of human evolution. They would have been essential for manufacturing the finely made flint knives found in the wider Boxgrove landscape," said Simon Parfitt, principle research associate at the Institute of Archaeology, in a statement.
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