Lower Paleolithic (approx. 700,00𒐪0-300,000 years ago), Franc💮e
Live auction begins on:
July 16, 02:00 PM GMT
Estimate
3,000 - 5,000 USD
Bid
2,200 USD
Lot Details
Description
Paleolithic (Acheulean) Flint Handaxe With 🍸Fossil Inclusions
Produced by Homo heidelbergensis
Lower Paleolithic (approx. 700,000-300,000 years ago)
France
6¾ x 3¼ x 2 inches (17.1 x 8.3 x 5.1 cm), 7¾ inches (19.7 cm) on sta🐻nd.
A large and well preserved white flint handaxe (b🐈iface) with evidence of fossil inclusions and knap𓄧ped on both sides. A French collection stamp is affixed to the specimen.
Formerly in the c🍎ollection of François Bigot (1950-2009).
Inc🎶luded with a license from the French Cultural Ministry.
THE ORIGINS OF HUMAN TECHNOLOGY
Homo heidelbergensis is an extinct species of archaic human that lived in Europe, Africa, and possibly Asia from approximately 700,000 to 300,000 years ago. The species is named after the town of Heidelberg, Germany, where the first specimen was discovered in 1907, and named shortly thereafter by anthropologist Otto Schoetensack. Homo heidelbergensis is considered to be the most recent common ancestor between modern humans and Neanderth🔯als.
Although stone toolmaking has been attributed to both Homo habilis and various australopithecines between 2.5 and 1.5 million years ago, the Acheulean stone tool industry of Homo erectus and Homo heidelbergensis constituted a technological revolution, best characterized by the handaxe as offered here (see also Lots 46 and 48). Acheulean handaxes were the first stone tools to be worked symmetrically on both sides, and would have been used for cutting, hunting, butchering, and digging in soil. The shaping of two-sided handaxes – also known as bifaces – through the process of knapping (removing flakes around the core of a stone) is a c♉omplex skill that archaeologists have attributed to an increase in prefrontal brain activity and a high degree of working memory, both vital to the development of modern human cognition.
REFERENCES:
De la Torre, Ignacio. “The Origins of the Acheulean: Past and Present Perspectives on a Major Transition in Human Evolution.” Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 371, no. 1698 (2016): 1–13.
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