Advanced crafting(手工艺) of stone spearheads(矛头,先锋) contributed to the development of new ways of human thinking and behaving. This is what new findings by archaeologists at Lund University have shown. The technology took a long time to acquire, required step by step planning and increased social interaction across the generations. This led to the human brain developing new abilities.
200 000 years ago, small groups of people wandered across Africa, looking like us anatomically(结构上) but not thinking the way we do today. Studies of fossils and the rate of mutations in DNA1 show that the human species to which we all belong – Homo sapiens sapiens – has existed for 200 000 years. But the archaeological research of recent years has shown that, even though the most ancient traces of modern humans are 200 000 years old, the development of modern cognitive2 behaviour is probably much younger. For about 100 000 years, there were people who looked like us, but who acted on the basis of cognitive structures in which we would only partially3 recognise ourselves and which we do not define today as modern behaviour.
It is precisely4 that period of transformation5 that the researchers at Lund University in Sweden have studied. In the next issue of the well renowned6 Journal of Human Evolution, they present their new findings on the early modern humans that existed in what is now South Africa, approximately 80 000 years ago.
The findings show that people at that time used advanced technology for the production of spearheads and that the complicated crafting process developed the working memory and social life of humans.
"When the technology was passed from one generation to the next, from adults to children, it became part of a cultural learning process which created a socially more advanced society than before. This affected7 the development of the human brain and cognitive ability", says Anders Högberg, PhD.
The technology led to increased social interaction within and across the generations. This happened because the crafting of stone spearheads took a long time to learn and required a lot of knowledge, both theoretical and practical. Producing a stone spearhead also required the ability to plan in several stages. This social learning contributed to the subsequent development of early modern humans' cognitive ability to express symbolism and abstract thoughts through their material culture, for example in the form of decorated(装饰的) objects.
"The excavations8 have been carried out in a small cave; the location we have studied is called Hollow Rock Shelter and lies 250 km north of Cape9 Town. We are cooperating with the University of Cape Town and the research we have just published is part of a larger research project on this location", says Professor Lars Larsson.