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cover of episode Earliest crafted bone tools date back 1.5 million years

Earliest crafted bone tools date back 1.5 million years

2025/3/5
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Nature Podcast

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B
Benjamin Thompson
I
Ignacio de la Torre
N
Nick Pettrichow
S
Sharmini Bandel
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Ignacio de la Torre: 我和我的同事在坦桑尼亚发现了27件150万年前的骨制工具。这些工具是用大型哺乳动物的长骨制成的,经过系统性加工,长度接近40厘米。这一发现将人类专门制造骨制工具的历史提前了约100万年,并引发了关于早期人类技术复杂程度的诸多疑问。这些骨制工具的形状和磨损痕迹表明,它们可能用于刺戳等需要尖锐工具的活动,例如处理动物尸体。这项发现不仅扩展了我们对早期人类技术能力的认识,也表明考古学家需要重新审视以往的考古遗址,寻找可能被忽视的骨制工具。我们推测,这种系统性地制造骨制工具的行为可能在人类进化史上持续存在,但这还需要进一步的考古证据来证实。这项发现也与旧石器时代早期阿舍利文化(Acheulean)的出现有关,这是一种比奥尔德温文化(Oldowan)更复杂的技术,可能与骨制工具的出现有关。虽然对这项发现的进化意义的解读可能会随着未来研究而改变,但这些骨制工具的确切年代和性质是毋庸置疑的。 Sharmini Bandel & Nick Pettrichow: 坦桑尼亚发现的150万年前的骨制工具数量众多且制作精良,这表明古人类的工具制作技术比我们之前想象的要复杂得多。这项发现表明,古人类不仅会使用石头制作工具,还会使用骨头,这扩展了我们对他们智力发展的理解。由于骨制工具易腐烂,考古记录中保存下来的骨制工具较少,但这项发现表明,可能存在更多尚未被发现的骨制工具。

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00:46 Ancient humans made bone tools 1.5 million years ago

A 1.5-million-year-old cache of animal-bone tools reveals that ancient humans systematically crafted with this material much earlier than previously thought. Researchers uncovered 27 bone artefacts in Tanzania honed into sharp tools almost 40 cm long. This discovery pushes back the dedicated manufacture of bone tools by around a million years and could have helped these early humans develop new kinds of technology. “This raises a lot of interesting questions,” says study author Ignacio de la Torre.

Research Article: de la Torre et al.)

09:11 Research Highlights

Cane toads’ remarkable homing abilities, and evidence that the block of rock that makes up southern Tibet originated in what is now Australia.

Research Highlight: Take me home, country toads)

Research Highlight: Lhasa′s rocks reveal an Australian birthplace)

11:45 A trove of antibacterial molecules hidden in human proteins

To help protect against infection, cells in the body will selectively cut proteins to produce molecules known as antimicrobial peptides, according to new research. A team has found that many potential peptides appear to be locked up within proteins — to get them out, cells shift the activity of a waste-disposal system called the proteasome, known for its role in protein degradation and recycling. In tests, one of these peptides showed efficacy at protecting mice from infection, indicating that these molecules could one day have therapeutic potential.

Research Article: Goldberg et al.)

News and Views: Protein waste turned into antibiotics as a defence strategy of human cells)

21:08 Briefing Chat

An update on two missions heading to the Moon to look for water, and why fears that a crucial ocean-current system will collapse in the face of climate change may be incorrect.

Nature: Meet the ice-hunting robots headed for the Moon right now)

Nature: Iconic ocean-current system is safe from climate collapse ― for now)

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