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75,000年前的高科技武器 -- C. Q. Choi
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Early Humans' Weapon-Making Skills Sharper Than Expected

Charles Q. Choi, LiveScience Senior Writer

A delicate, sophisticated way to craft sharp weapons from stone apparently was developed by humans more than 50,000 years sooner than had been thought.

The finding could shed light on what knowledge people were armed with when they started migrating out of Africa.

The artful technique is known as pressure flaking. Early weapons' makers typically would use hard blows from a stone hammer to give another stone a rough blade-like shape, then would use wood or bone implements to carve out relatively small flakes, refining the blade's edge and tip.

When done right, pressure flaking can provide a high degree of control over the sharpness, thickness and overall shape of sharp tools such as spearheads and stone knives, said researcher Paola Villa, an archaeologist at the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History.

Pressure flaking has long been considered a fairly recent innovation, with the earliest examples seen roughly 20,000 years ago in the Solutrean culture in France and Spain. Now, however, researchers say Blombos Cave in South Africa yielded what seem to be 75,000-year-old spearheads made by anatomically modern humans using pressure flaking.

"We did not expect to find evidence of this very skillful method for shaping and retouching stone artifacts at such an early time," Villa told LiveScience.

In addition to these sharp points, the site yielded other evidence of modern human behavior, such as artwork in the form of shell beads. These are all linked to the so-called Still Bay industry, a Middle Stone Age tool-manufacturing style that was adopted roughly 76,000 years ago and may have lasted about 4,000 years.

"This finding is important because it shows that modern humans in South Africa had a sophisticated repertoire of toolmaking techniques at a very early time," Villa said. "This innovation is a clear example of a tendency to develop new functional ideas and devices. It adds to the complex of novel behaviors already documented at the site, and shows that the Still Bay was a time when novel ideas and techniques were rapidly developed."

The stone points were made of silcrete, or quartz grains cemented by silica, which needs to be heat-treated before pressure flaking. To confirm that was how the newfound artifacts were made, Villa and her colleagues analyzed microscopic details of 159 silcrete points and fragments, 179 other retouched pieces and more than 700 flakes in Blombos Cave from the Still Bay industry.

The removal of flakes from unheated silcrete produces scar surfaces with a rough, dull texture. However, the surfaces of silcrete that was treated with heat have a smooth, glossy appearance. The researchers concluded that at least half of the ancient, finished points at Blombos Cave involved pressure flaking with heat-treated silcrete.

The scientists also experimentally crafted stone points using both heated and non-heated silcrete chunks collected from outcrops roughly 20 miles (32 km) from Blombos Cave. They found that unheated chunks could not be pressure flaked, while blocks of heated silcrete yielded points very much like the ones discovered.

Villa and her colleagues speculate that pressure flaking was invented in Africa and proved crucial to survival when Homo sapiens migrated from the continent about 60,000 years ago, leading to the technique's widespread adoption in Europe, Australia, North America and later Africa.

"More technological studies like ours, based on experimental replication, microscopic studies and detailed analysis of stone artifacts, supported by statistics, should be applied to other archaeological assemblages in South Africa and in other regions," Villa said. "It is important to understand if there are precursors or antecedents in older industries. It is also important to understand if the method was used in the following period - that is, on the backed blades of the Howiesons Poort, a South African culture dating to 65,000 to 60,000 years ago, thus establishing continuity and cultural transmission between social groups in South Africa."

The scientists detail their findings in tomorrow's issue (Oct. 29) of the journal Science.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20101028/sc_livescience/earlyhumansweaponmakingskillssharperthanexpected



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麥芽糖

請參閱:《自然科學10大懸案 -- LifeScience Staff

https://city.udn.com/2976/4256674



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    回應給: 麥芽糖(myata) 推薦1


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麥芽糖

某些19世紀末、20世紀初的科學家的確自信滿滿;但是當代科學家則充分了解人類目前知識的侷限。每個月甚至每週生物學新品種的發現,以及考古人類學每個月新化石的發現,使得演化過程和理論不斷的被修正;正在LHC進行的實驗讓很多科學家期待「新物理學」的到來;眾多超弦理論的莫衷一是,使宇宙學多采多姿也不知何去何從;而物理學家還在尋找佔宇宙96%的,而目前人類根本看不到的暗物質和暗能量。以上及其他關於通俗科學知識的報導,在本城市經常有轉載。

在科學家追求知識的過程中,他/她們往往發現更多未知或有待解釋的現象;每當他/她們得到一個「新」答案或「新」結論時,科學家也必定發現更多需要解釋的現象,同時必須重新建立或修正一些目前被接受的現有理論。因此,「追求知識」是個沒完沒了的工作。莊子是第一個陳述這個現實的哲學家或認知科學家。

追求知識是科學家混飯吃的方式。所以,即使人類具備了「所有的」知識,科學家也絕對不會承認或接受這個「事實」。我曾經聽過一個黑色笑話:

醫學界其實早就有治療癌症的方法,只有當局不願公佈。因為每年靠研究與治療癌症維生的人數,遠遠超過死於癌症的人數。

至於摩西和紅海的傳說,請參考:

分開紅海的可能是強風-N. Jones》一文

https://city.udn.com/2976/4250476?tpno=0&cate_no=0

這類研究只有「姑妄聽之」的價值,所以我以前沒有轉貼。



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    回應給: 胡卜凱(jamesbkh) 推薦0


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呵呵!

現在的科學家, 覺得自己知道的, 就是所有的知識!

人類太多以往的成就, 現代科學家還是不瞭解.

不是有個摩西, 離開非洲的時候, 分開紅海?  現代科學家還是不瞭解.

呵呵! 就當我豬頭好啦!






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