Researchers from Nagoya University Japan have revealed when Stone-Age technological progress began.
The team have defined the moment when prehistoric people became sophisticated toolmakers. They examined how our ancestors crafted advanced stone tools over a period of 50,000 years, straddling six cultural eras.
Findings published in the journal Nature Communications suggest that the increase in inventiveness and productivity of primitive humans only began with the spread of Homo sapiens across Eurasia.
That coincides with the advancement of small stone blade technology during the early Upper Old Stone Age period or Early Upper Paleolithic.
The scientists explored how stone tools changed between the Middle to the Upper Paleolithic periods by counting the number of sharp edges on implements unearthed by palaeontologists. The team picked eight groups of tools from five places in southern Jordan with similar environments and available stone for toolmaking.
The study found a significant upswing in producing innovative tools did not correspond with the Middle and Upper Palaeolithic eras, when primitive people started using more blades in the Initial Upper Palaeolithic period. Rather, it occurred later when bladelet technology developed in the Early Upper Palaeolithic years.
The Japanese team believe their findings partially refute the common theory that early humans overtook Neanderthals and conquered swathes of land thanks to their more-advanced culture and stone tool technology. They posit that these advances only came as our ancestors explored new lands and adapted to their environments over time.