logo
1.5 million-year-old stone tools from mystery human relative discovered in Indonesia — they reached the region before our species even existed

1.5 million-year-old stone tools from mystery human relative discovered in Indonesia — they reached the region before our species even existed

Yahoo2 days ago
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Stone tools discovered on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi are rewriting what experts thought they knew about human evolution in this region. The tools date to about 1 million to 1.5 million years ago, which suggests that Sulawesi was occupied by an unknown human relative long before our species evolved.
"These are simple, sharp-edged flakes of stone that would have been useful as general-purpose cutting and scraping implements," study co-author Adam Brumm, professor of archaeology at Griffith University in Australia, told Live Science in an email.
In a study published Wednesday (Aug. 6) in the journal Nature, researchers analyzed a set of stone tools that represent the oldest evidence of human relatives in Wallacea, a vast expanse of islands that lie between the Asian and Australian continental shelves.
During excavations between 2019 and 2022, the team discovered seven stone artifacts at Calio, a locality on Sulawesi. The artifacts were made from chert, a hard and fine-grained sedimentary rock, and were created using a percussion flaking technique, where a core rock is struck with a hammer stone to create sharp flake tools. One of the tools was even retouched, which involves trimming the edges of a flake tool to make it sharper.
Using a combination of dating methods, the researchers dated the sediments in which the tools were found to between 1.04 million and 1.48 million years ago. This matches up chronologically with Homo erectus, which reached the Indonesian island of Java around 1.6 million years ago after first evolving in Africa. But Sulawesi does not have as extensive a fossil record as Java.
"So far, the oldest human skeletal element found anywhere on this island [Sulawesi] is a modern human maxilla [upper jaw] fragment that is around 25,000 to 16,000 years old," Brumm said. Sulawesi is also home to the world's oldest narrative cave art, which dates to at least 51,200 years ago. And the oldest stone tool found on Sulawesi, besides the new finds, is about 194,000 years old, the researchers noted in the study.
Related: 140,000 year old bones of our ancient ancestors found on sea floor, revealing secrets of extinct human species
This new stone tool discovery reveals that human relatives occupied Sulawesi much earlier than previously assumed, likely before they made it to the island of Luzon to the north and the island of Flores to the south. And this means that the mystery group on Sulawesi could be the ancestors of Homo luzonensis or Homo floresiensis, both of which were "hobbit"-size human relatives.
The researchers aren't yet sure which species made the tools.
"Until we have found fossils of archaic hominins on Sulawesi," Brumm said, "it would be premature to assign a hominin species to the tool-makers."
RELATED STORIES
—Human 'hobbit' ancestor may be hiding in Indonesia, new controversial book claims
—Ancient remains found in Indonesia belong to a vanished human lineage
—World's oldest cave art, including famous hand stencils, being erased by climate change
But the most likely scenario, given the date range, is that the tools were made by H. erectus or a species similar to H. floresiensis, Brumm said. "We think the Flores hominins came from Sulawesi originally."
It is also still unclear what the hominins were using the tools for.
"Hominins could have used them for tasks involved in the direct procurement of food," Brumm said, "or to fashion tools from wood or other perishable plant materials." So far, though, none of the animal bones that the team has found have cut marks or other signs of butchery.
Human evolution quiz: What do you know about Homo sapiens?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Proposed spacecraft could carry up to 2,400 people on a one-way trip to the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri
Proposed spacecraft could carry up to 2,400 people on a one-way trip to the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri

Yahoo

time18 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Proposed spacecraft could carry up to 2,400 people on a one-way trip to the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Engineers have designed a spacecraft that could take up to 2,400 people on a one-way trip to Alpha Centauri, the star system closest to our own. The craft, called Chrysalis, could make the 25 trillion mile (40 trillion kilometer) journey in around 400 years, the engineers say in their project brief, meaning many of its potential passengers would only know life on the craft. Chrysalis is designed to house several generations of people until it enters the star system, where it could shuttle them to the surface of the planet Proxima Centuri b — an Earth-size exoplanet that is thought to be potentially habitable. The project won first place in the Project Hyperion Design Competition, a challenge that requires teams to design hypothetical multigenerational ships for interstellar travel. Life on the Chrysalis Before boarding the ship, the Chrysalis project would require initial generations of ship inhabitants to live in and adapt to an isolated environment in Antarctica for 70 to 80 years to ensure psychological wellbeing. The ship could theoretically be constructed in 20 to 25 years and retains gravity through constant rotation. The vessel, which would measure 36 miles (58 km) in length, would be constructed like a Russian nesting doll, with several layers encompassing each other around a central core. The layers include communal spaces, farms, gardens, homes, warehouses and other shared facilities, each powered by nuclear fusion reactors. The core in the center of the vehicle hosts the shuttles that could bring people to Proxima Centuri b, as well as all of Chrysalis' communication equipment. Related: Will we ever reach Alpha Centauri, our closest neighboring star system? The layer closest to Chrysalis' core is dedicated to food production, nurturing plants, fungi, microbes, insects and livestock in controlled environments. To preserve biodiversity, different environments including tropical and boreal forests would be maintained. The second level from the center provides communal spaces, like parks, schools, hospitals and libraries, for the ship's inhabitants. The next shell would then hold dwellings for individual households, equipped with air circulation and heat exchangers. Work happens on the next level up, where there are facilities for industries ranging from recycling to pharmaceuticals to structural manufacturing. The fifth and outermost shell would serve as a warehouse for varied types of resources, materials, equipment and machinery. The Chrysalis' designers suggest that robots could run this level, reducing the need for human physical labor. Births would be planned in Chrysalis to ensure the population stays at a sustainable level, which the research team determined to be about 1,500 people — 900 people less than the ship's total capacity. Those responsible for the ship's governance would collaborate with artificial intelligence, "allowing for resilience of the whole social system, better knowledge transfer between the different generations of inhabitants and a deeper vision of the overall dynamics of the Chrysalis spaceship complex," the project engineers wrote in their pitch. RELATED STORIES —ChatGPT could pilot a spacecraft shockingly well, early tests find —China wants to build a mega spaceship that's nearly a mile long —Here's every spaceship that's ever carried an astronaut into orbit This plan is purely hypothetical, as some of the required technology, like commercial nuclear fusion reactors, don't yet exist. However, hypothetical projects like this one can still add to our existing knowledge base and help engineers improve upcoming designs. The Project Hyperion jury wrote on its website that Chrysalis was impressive for its "system-level coherence and innovative design of the modular habitat structure" and "overall depth of detail." The winning team of five researchers was awarded $5,000 USD. Human spaceflight quiz: How well do you know our journey into space?

Meet the murder hornet's Canadian cousin
Meet the murder hornet's Canadian cousin

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Meet the murder hornet's Canadian cousin

'Murder hornets' have been making a buzz in the media for years for their immense size and deadly behaviour. Also called the northern giant hornet (formerly the Asian giant hornet), these terrifying insects were first detected in Canada in 2019, near Nanaimo, B.C. This invasive species poses a huge threat to Canada's ecosystems, as they are known to quickly destroy entire bee colonies, which are essential in maintaining healthy ecosystems. RELATED: Each summer, people across Canada will report murder hornet sightings. However, experts are quick to clarify that the sightings people commonly report are actually European hornets—a species that was introduced to North America over 160 years ago and has become part of Canada's natural ecosystem. While they were introduced, this does not make them invasive as they have naturally integrated with the environment and are not harmful. Both insect species belong to the family Vespa, but there are some big differences between the two. Murder hornets, formally called northern giant hornets, are invasive to Canada and pose a major risk to native bee colonies and our ecosystems. (Yasunori Koide/Wikimedia Commons) CC-BY-SA 4.0 European hornets versus murder hornets European hornets are found in Eastern Canada and can look scarily similar to the murder hornet. They are much larger than the yellowjackets that we are used to seeing each summer but are actually a lot smaller than murder hornets. They have a similar striped pattern on their abdomens to murder hornets, but the key difference is that their abdomens are yellow, whereas the murder hornets are more yellow-orange. SEE ALSO: Unlike murder hornets, European hornets don't pose a threat to other native insect species and ecosystems. While they do sometimes eat bees, they don't destroy entire colonies and can actually provide bees protection from other predatory insects, such as wax moths. European hornets can be found in Canada and are often mistaken for the murder hornet (northern giant hornet). (Dr. Guido Bohne/iNaturalist) CC-BY-SA 4.0 European hornets also create paper nests similar to those made by paper wasps and yellowjackets. Conversely, murder hornets build their nests underground around tree roots. Like any other stinging insect, the European hornet can get aggressive when you invade its territory or grab at it, but they otherwise try to avoid interacting with people. They do have a soft spot for sweet fruits, though, and you may see more of them buzz around you in the late summer and early fall as their natural food sources begin to dwindle. Despite their scary appearance, European hornets are important for our ecosystems, providing natural pest control and pollination services. If you believe you have spotted a murder hornet in Canada and are able to take a photo as proof, you can report it to the Invasive Species Centre. Thumbnail image credit to Judy Gallagher/iNaturalist CC-BY-SA 4.0

The biggest black hole ever seen? Scientists find one with mass of 36 billion suns
The biggest black hole ever seen? Scientists find one with mass of 36 billion suns

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

The biggest black hole ever seen? Scientists find one with mass of 36 billion suns

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. About 5 billion light-years away from where you're sitting, in one of the most massive galaxies on record, there exists an astonishing black hole. It was only just measured by scientists who managed to peer through the fabric of warped space-time — and it appears to hold a mass equivalent to that of 36 billion suns. Yes, billion. "This is amongst the top 10 most massive black holes ever discovered, and quite possibly the most massive," Thomas Collett, study author and a professor at the University of Portsmouth in England, said in a statement. More specifically, the black hole is found in one of two galaxies that make up the Cosmic Horseshoe system and is what's known as a "dormant" black hole. This means it's a relatively quiet black hole; it isn't actively chomping on matter in its surroundings, as opposed to an active black hole that is accreting matter from a disk that circles it, known as an accretion disk. The black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy, Sagittarius A*, is also a dormant black hole — but, for context, it only holds the mass of about 4.15 million suns. The fact that the Cosmic Horseshoe black hole is found in such a massive galaxy and that Sagittarius A* is found in our more modestly sized Milky Way is probably not a coincidence. In fact, the team behind the new measurement is hoping to learn more about the apparent size connection between supermassive black holes and their parent galaxies. "We think the size of both is intimately linked," Collett said, "because when galaxies grow they can funnel matter down onto the central black hole. Some of this matter grows the black hole, but lots of it shines away in an incredibly bright source called a quasar. These quasars dump huge amounts of energy into their host galaxies, which stops gas clouds condensing into new stars." This brings us to another key aspect of the team's findings: the way this black hole was measured to begin with. The research team was able to utilize a unique approach that doesn't rely on the black hole being an actively accreting one. Without active feeding, black holes can kind of hide behind the veil of the cosmos. It is the accretion itself that usually gives these objects away. Such commotion produces lots of emissions, like X-rays, that scientists here on Earth can detect. Naturally, it's also far easier to measure the precise masses of black holes via such emissions. However, there is one characteristic of black holes that even dormant ones can't suppress: their immense gravitational pull. And the greater the gravitational pull, the greater the warp in space-time, as predicted by Albert Einstein's general relativity theory. Where Einstein comes in In a nutshell, Albert Einstein's famous theory of general relativity explains the true nature of gravity. It suggests that gravity isn't quite an intrinsic, elusive property of an object that pulls things down. In other words, Earth itself isn't really pulling us down to the ground. Rather, general relativity states that objects with mass (all objects, including you and me) warp the four-dimensional fabric of space-time — and these warps influence the motion of other objects caught up in the folds. For instance, imagine a trampoline on which you place a ball. That ball would warp the trampoline inward. Now, imagine placing a smaller ball on the trampoline. That smaller ball would fall inward as well, along the warped trampoline's fabric and sit right next to the original ball. The trampoline in this case is space-time, the original ball is Earth and the smaller ball is you. The big caveat in this analogy, however, is that this trampoline exists in three dimensions. We'd need to scale this up to the four-dimensional universe for it to start representing reality more accurately, but our brains have a hard time comprehending that dimension visually. Importantly for the team's new measurements, something that arises from warped space-time (in the fourth dimension, remember) is that physical matter isn't the only thing affected by the warps. Light gets affected, too — and that includes light emanating from galaxies, such as the other galaxy in the Cosmic Horseshoe. This is the effect the study team managed to take advantage of when spotting the newly confirmed black hole. Light from the Cosmic Horseshoe system's background galaxy was warped as it traveled past the foreground galaxy that contains black hole. The Cosmic Horseshoe system is actually an iconic example of this effect, which is called gravitational lensing. Not only does this system have a strong version of this effect, but each galaxy involved happens to be perfectly aligned such that the light-warped background galaxy appears as almost a perfect ring around the foreground galaxy. When this happens, it's called an "Einstein Ring." So, we're seeing an "almost" Einstein ring in this case. It's more like ... an Einstein horseshoe? After combining those gravitational lensing measurements with measurements of stars in the vicinity that appeared to be zipping around at high speeds, the researchers knew they were onto something. Though scientists have previously suggested a monster black hole lurks in the Cosmic Horseshoe system, concrete evidence of the object and of its precise size wasn't available until now. "We detected the effect of the black hole in two ways — it is altering the path that light takes as it travels past the black hole and it is causing the stars in the inner regions of its host galaxy to move extremely quickly (almost 400 km/s)," Collet said. "By combining these two measurements, we can be completely confident that the black hole is real." "Its detection relied purely on its immense gravitational pull and the effect it has on its surroundings," Carlos Melo, study lead author and a Ph.D. candidate at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil, said in the statement. "What is particularly exciting is that this method allows us to detect and measure the mass of these hidden ultramassive black holes across the universe, even when they are completely silent." What's next? There are quite a few ways to move forward on this work, one of which is, as mentioned, to reveal the link between galaxy size and supermassive black hole size — but another could be to zero in on the Cosmic Horseshoe black hole alone and learn how it became so utterly gigantic. The Cosmic Horseshoe is what's known as a "fossil group," which refers to the end stage of the "most massive gravitationally bound structures in the universe, arising when they have collapsed down to a single extremely massive galaxy, with no bright companions," according to the statement. The Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies will likely become a fossil group someday, seeing as they're likely on a path to colliding somewhere in the far future. That crash has recently been brought into question, but it's still a possibility. Nonetheless, the Cosmic Horseshoe could very well be a peek into our realm's final era. "It is likely that all of the supermassive black holes that were originally in the companion galaxies have also now merged to form the ultramassive black hole that we have detected," said Collett. "So we're seeing the end state of galaxy formation and the end state of black hole formation." The team's paper was published on Aug. 7 in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store