Our understanding of what "primitive" humans could do keeps expanding and pushing back further in time. This find moves the bar a very long way.
Archaeology
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Archaeology or archeology[a] is the study of human activity through the recovery and analysis of material culture. The archaeological record consists of artifacts, architecture, biofacts or ecofacts, sites, and cultural landscapes.
Archaeology has various goals, which range from understanding culture history to reconstructing past lifeways to documenting and explaining changes in human societies through time.
The discipline involves surveying, excavation, and eventually analysis of data collected, to learn more about the past. In broad scope, archaeology relies on cross-disciplinary research. Read more...
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This blows my mind. It means that Neanderthals could have been building log cabins and their ancestors as well.
So they talk about this as if it were a new innovation at the timeβbut could it be that this kind of woodworking was more widespread and this was just the only example to survive? Could it have been a standard part of the Acheulian toolkit?
That's probably the assumption they're working with, because historians do it all the time. Document survival for the pre-modern period is so poor that it doesn't take very many examples to demonstrate (for all intents and purposes) that something was widespread.
Why couldn't those darn pre-moderns just do proper backups of their documents? I bet they didn't even have cloud storage!
Could have at least sent a scheduled slack message
I think that was the time fire was discovered/harnessed. That's old for human history.
I would honestly be shocked if there were no Homo Erectus cities and large scale societies. They existed for far longer than us, and were almost if not just as smart as us.