Tools such as two-sided spearheads along with engraved objects that are about 71,000 years old are among many ancient human artifacts that researchers say signify high-level communication. The geographic distribution of these objects at nine sites in South Africa suggests innovation—not climate change—may have triggered early humans' migration out of Africa, researchers report in an October 2008 study.
Photograph courtesy Chris Henshilwood (National Geographic)
From National Geographic:
Innovation—not climate change—may have triggered early humans' migration out of Africa, a new study suggests.
For early Homo sapiens, periods of population movement coincided with social advances and tool-making innovation, the work found.
By contrast, human movements didn't match as closely with changes in Africa's climate, such as rainfall variation or other weather issues, as previous research had suggested.
The study authors caution, however, that their work doesn't suggest a specific cause-and-effect relationship.
"We see bursts of migration during a period with technological advances, so technology might have led to the migration," said Zenobia Jacobs, lead researcher from the University of Wollongong in Australia.
Alternatively, migration may have spread new ideas and skills throughout various populations.
"It's like the chicken-and-egg argument—did migration lead to innovation or did innovation stimulate migration?" Jacobs said.
The new study appears today in the journal Science.
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