Stone tool discovery pushes back dawn of culture by 700,000 years
by Hannah Devlin, science correspondent from on (#9DNE)
Finding overturns idea that tool-making ability was unique to our own ancestors and is hailed as a "new beginning to the known archaeological record"
The oldest known stone tools, dating to long before the emergence of modern humans, have been discovered in Africa.
The roughly-hewn stones, which are around 3.3 million years old, have been hailed by scientists as a "new beginning to the known archaeological record" and push back the dawn of culture by 700,000 years.
Related: Skull of Homo erectus throws story of human evolution into disarray
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