Paleolithic tools were made. Lecture "Human Origins"

Living conditions of primitive people. The process of anthropogenesis took about 3 million years. During this time, radical changes occurred in nature more than once. There were four glaciations. The glacial and warm eras had their own periods of warming and cooling.

During ice ages in northern Eurasia and North America, a layer of ice up to 2 km thick covered vast territories. The border of the glacier at the time of its greatest distribution during the last glaciation (its beginning dates from 185 to 70 thousand years ago) passed south of Volgograd, Kyiv, Berlin, and London.

The endless tundra stretched south from the glacier. In the summer it was lush here, but it took a long time for the grass to grow and the bushes to turn green.

People populated the periglacial areas quite densely. Animals lived there, which for many millennia became the main object of hunting for humans, since they provided abundant food, as well as skins and bones. These are mammoths, woolly rhinoceroses and cave bears. Herds of wild horses, deer, bison, etc. grazed here.

Glaciation periods became a severe test for primitive people. The need to confront unfavorable conditions contributed to the progressive development of mankind. Hunting for large animals was possible only with the participation of a significant number of people. It is assumed that the hunt was driven: animals were driven either to cliffs or to specially dug holes. However, a person could survive only in a group of his own kind.

Tribal community. It is very difficult to judge social relations during the Paleolithic period. Even the most backward tribes studied by ethnographers (Bushmen, Australian aborigines), according to archaeological periodization, were at the Mesolithic stage.

It is assumed that the first people (Homo habilis, Homo erectus), like modern monkeys, lived in small groups (the term “human herd” is now not used by most researchers). In groups of modern apes, the leader and several males close to him dominate over all other males and females. Some peoples studied by ethnographers who were at the primitive stage also observed a system of dominance of leaders and their associates over the rest of the team. Perhaps it was also the case with the first people.

At the same time, there is another opinion, which is also confirmed by ethnographic research. In the collectives of the majority of backward peoples, relations were recorded that in the scientific literature were called “primitive communism”. It is worth saying that they are characterized by equality of team members, mutual assistance and mutual assistance. Most likely, it was precisely such social relations that allowed people to survive the extreme conditions of the Ice Ages. The study of settlements of the Late Paleolithic, data from ethnography and folkloristics allowed scientists to come to the conclusion that the basis of the social organization of the Cro-Magnons was the clan community (clan) - a group of blood relatives leading its descent from a common ancestor.

Judging by the excavations, the ancient tribal community consisted of 100 - 150 people. All relatives jointly engaged in hunting, gathering, making tools and processing prey. Dwellings, food supplies, animal skins, and tools were considered common property. At the head of the clan were the most respected and experienced people, usually the eldest in age (elders). All the most important issues in the life of the community were decided at a meeting of all its adult members (people's assembly).

The problem of sexual relations is closely related to the problem of the social structure of primitive peoples. Apes have harem families: only the leader and his associates participate in reproduction, using all the females. Scientists suggest that under the conditions of the elimination of the leader's dominance system, sexual relations took the form of promiscuity - every man in the group was considered the husband of every woman. Later appeared exogamy- a ban on marriage within the clan community. A dual-clan group marriage developed, in which members of one clan could only marry members of another clan. This custom, recorded among many peoples by ethnographers, contributed to the biological progress of mankind.

A separate genus could not exist in isolation. Clan communities united into tribes. Initially there were two clans in the tribe, and then there were more and more of them. Over time, restrictions also appeared in group marriage. Members of the clan were divided into classes according to age (marriages were allowed only between classes corresponding to each other). Then a couple marriage developed, which was initially very fragile.

For a long time, the prevailing idea in science was that the clan organization went through two stages in its development - matriarchy And patriarchy. Under matriarchy, kinship was counted along the maternal line, and husbands went to live in their wife’s clan. Under patriarchy, the main unit of society becomes the large patriarchal family. Today, opinions are expressed that these stages were not universal for all primitive peoples, and elements of matriarchy could arise at later stages of the development of primitive tribes.

Achievements of people during the Late Paleolithic period. The Late Paleolithic is archaeologically characterized primarily by the presence of a wide variety of stone tools. The material used was flint, as well as obsidian, jasper and other types of hard but easily split stone. Along with the universal hand ax, specialized tools appeared for different purposes. The skins were processed with a stone scraper, holes were pierced in them with a pierce, a sharp point, cut with a knife, chisel, etc. They made composite tools: a sharp stone was tied to a wooden handle, and the result was a spear or an ax.

The technique of stone processing has changed. By pressing, thin and light plates were broken off from a specially prepared stone - the core (core). The cutting edges of the weapon were sharpened using pressure and light blows (retouching).

A spear thrower was invented - a plank with a stop that allows you to throw a spear at high speed. This was the first mechanical device in human history.

The cold climate led to the development of clothing and improved housing. The skin of the animal was cut into pieces, holes were pierced along the edges with stone needles and sewn together with the sinews of the animals. Caves were widely used as dwellings in Western Europe and a number of other places. It was once believed that primitive people usually lived in caves. These people were called troglodytes (cave people). At the same time, in Eastern Europe, even where there were caves (for example, in the Urals), people did not settle in them. Here they usually dug a round or oval hole, dug upright bones of mammoths or other large animals bent inward along its edges, covered them with skins, branches and covered them with earth. Up to 50 people could live in such a “house”. In the center, several hearths were made of stones. In settlements there were usually 2 - 3 similar dwellings.

The first thing happens gender and age division of labor: men went hunting, women gathered, prepared food, and sewed clothes. The children helped the women.

The transition from teenagers to adults took place during a ritual initiation. In preparation for initiation, adults taught teenagers to use weapons, hunt, and get food. During the ritual itself, they were subjected to hunger, beatings, left alone in the forest, etc. Sometimes there was a symbolic “death” of a teenager and his “rebirth” as an adult. Both boys and girls underwent initiation. After initiation, they became full members of the tribe and could marry.

During the Late Paleolithic period, people settled all the lands of Eurasia available to them. During times of warming, they moved north, and when the glacier advanced, they retreated to the south. The settlement of America began 40 thousand years ago (and maybe even earlier). It is assumed that people got there through the isthmus that connected Chukotka and Alaska, or through the ice during the glacial period. People appeared in Australia. For the Early Paleolithic, all traces of human habitation in all regions of the Earth fit into the framework of general successive archaeological cultures (Olduvai, Acheulian, Mousterian), although there are also local differences. For the Late Paleolithic, the coexistence of various archaeological cultures is recorded. This indicates the emergence of ethnic differences. At the beginning of the Late Paleolithic, three main races of humanity began to emerge.

Primitive religion and art. Primitive people knew a lot about the world. They understood the habits of animals, the properties of various plants and stones, they knew how to predict the weather, and treat wounds and bites of poisonous snakes. Even surgical operations were performed with stone tools: they cut off a damaged arm or leg, opened the skull to remove a tumor.

In many practical knowledge, ancient people were superior to modern man. At the same time, they had no idea about many things. Observations of natural phenomena and reflections on people’s lives led to the emergence of the idea of ​​the existence of invisible forces - perfume And gods, that influence nature and human life. This is how religion was born.

Primitive religion differed significantly from the religion of subsequent times. For primitive people, gods and spirits were not some otherworldly forces that controlled the world; they were not perceived as something different from humans. The gods were embodied in very specific objects: stones, trees, animals. The ancestors of the family were also gods. These ancestors were often also considered to be some kind of animals. People felt their constant connection with the gods. For this reason, they believed that they could influence the gods and spirits: appease them, feed them (sacrifice ritual), and sometimes punish them.

Many religious rites were associated with hunting. With the help of magical actions they tried to make animals easier prey. Much attention was paid to the burial ritual, since members of the clan who were leaving for the afterlife had to be provided with everything necessary for life there.

Primitive art is associated with religion, the problem of its origin is still the subject of scientific discussion. It is assumed that art, like religion, has become one of the ways of understanding the world around us.

Art originated with the Neanderthals (incisions, ornaments). Under the Cro-Magnons, the time of its true heyday came. The most impressive monument of the Paleolithic times is cave painting. Hundreds of large color realistic images of mammoths, bison, deer, horses, and bears were found in a number of caves. Cave drawings date from 30 to 12 thousand years ago. These images were created for witchcraft hunting rituals; on some of them traces of impacts with stone tips were found. Perhaps the caves with drawings were also used during initiation as a kind of school of hunting skills.

No less interesting is the Paleolithic sculpture. These are animal figures made of stone, bone, and wood. Some of them have traces of blows that were inflicted during magical rituals.

Unlike animals, images of people were usually done abstractly. On the walls of the caves, all the people have masks on their faces. Paleolithic Venuses - small (5-15 cm) figurines of women, usually naked, occasionally clothed, also have practically no faces. Many such figurines were found in Western Europe, but most of all in Russia, in the Voronezh region, and also near Lake Baikal. Historians suggest that these are the ancestors of the clan. Such sculptures also expressed ideas of motherhood and fertility.

In addition to fine arts, songs and dances undoubtedly played a big role in people's lives.

Paleolithic sites in Russia. Some archaeologists date the first signs of human presence on the territory of modern Russia to about 1 million years ago. Thus, at the sites of Ulalinka (within the city of Gorno-Altaisk), Dering-Yuryakh near Yakutsk, and Mysovaya in the Southern Urals, primitive tools made from pebbles were discovered, similar to the most ancient products from East Africa. During the Late Paleolithic period, most of modern Russia was already inhabited.

One of the most famous places that speak of the presence of primitive people in our country is the Kapova Cave in Bashkiria in the Southern Urals. More than 40 drawings made in red ocher were found there: mammoths, bison, wild horses, rhinoceroses. The age of the drawings is 15-13 thousand years.

For archaeologists, one of the most interesting was the Kostenko-Borshchevsky district near Voronezh. Here, in a small area, 24 sites and 4 burials were excavated, a huge number of stone and bone tools, figurines, incl. a huge number of Paleolithic Venus.
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In total, traces of five archaeological cultures have been discovered in this area.

One of these cultures, which spread over a large territory, includes the famous Sungir site near Vladimir. In the 60s. XX century Two burials were excavated there, the age of which is 25 - 30 thousand years. In one of the burials lay a man 55-65 years old. It is believed that this was the leader of the tribe. All his clothes and hat were embroidered with hundreds of small beads larger than mammoth beads. His hands were decorated with more than 20 bracelets, also made from tusks. The second grave is even more interesting. A boy of 12-13 years old and a girl of 7-8 years old were lying in it with their heads facing each other. Their clothes were also richly decorated with bone items; in total, 7.5 thousand beads were collected. On the boy's chest lay a flat figurine of a horse, and at his shoulder - a mammoth. It remains a mystery why the children were given such a magnificent burial.

Paleolithic culture

The very first examples of Paleolithic art were discovered in caves in France in the 40s of the 19th century.

Thus, in 1864, in the La Madeleine cave, an image of a mammoth on a bone plate was found, which showed that people at that time not only lived with the mammoth, but also already reproduced this ancient animal in their drawings.

In 1875, cave paintings were unexpectedly discovered in Altamira (Spain), which amazed researchers with their magnificence.

Hundreds of figures outlined in dark lines - yellow, red, brown, painted with ocher, marl and soot - decorate the walls of the Lascaux cave. Here you can see the heads of deer, goats, horses, bulls, bison, rhinoceroses, and all of this is almost life-size.

This cave near Montignac in southwestern France was discovered in September 1940.

Four schoolchildren went on an archaeological expedition that they themselves had planned. In place of the uprooted tree, they saw a gaping hole in the ground. This hole interested them, especially since there were rumors that this was the entrance to a dungeon that led to a nearby medieval castle. Inside there was another hole - smaller. One of the schoolchildren threw a stone at it and determined from the noise of the fall that the depth here was great. And yet he widened the hole, climbed inside, lit a flashlight and, stunned, called his friends. Some huge animals were looking at the schoolchildren from the walls of the cave. Having come to their senses, the schoolchildren realized that this was not a dungeon leading to a medieval castle, but a cave of a prehistoric man. The young archaeologists reported their discovery to their teacher, who at first was distrustful of their story.

Image of a mammoth. Cave of La Madeleine (France).

But he still agreed to look at the find, and when he found himself in the cave, he gasped in amazement.

This is how the Lascaux cave was discovered, which was later nicknamed the “Sistine Chapel of primitive painting.” This comparison with the famous frescoes of Michelangelo is not accidental and not exaggerated. The painting of the cave fully expresses the spiritual aspirations and creative will of people who created their own fine art, which delights us even today.

By the way, French schoolchildren not only discovered the cave, but also immediately set up their camp near it and became the first guardians of artistic treasures.

This was useful, because the rumor about the cave paintings quickly spread throughout the area and attracted whole crowds of curious people.

As often happens in such cases, many initially doubted the authenticity of the ancient cave, suggesting that all this was the work of modern painters who decided to laugh at the gullible crowd.

However, the authenticity of the drawings was soon proven by scientific examination.

In the Lascaux cave we encounter a rare attempt by primitive man to depict a crowd scene with some complex plot. Before us is a bison wounded by a spear, whose entrails are falling out of its belly. Next to him is a defeated man. And not far from them is a picture of a rhinoceros, which may have killed the man.

It is difficult to determine exactly the content of this rock painting. It should be noted that the person on it is depicted schematically and ineptly. This is how children usually draw. But no child, perhaps, could accurately convey the death of a bison, the calm and ponderous tread of a victoriously retreating rhinoceros.

Images of goats and horses. Cave of Combarelles (France).

Interesting cave paintings were discovered in the Font-de-Gaume cave and in the Nio cave in France.

Already in the Aurignac era, we find on the walls of caves where people lived, the outline of a hand with widely spaced fingers, outlined in paint and enclosed in a circle. It is quite possible that in this way primitive man tried to leave his own imprint on the stone in order to imprint and establish his presence.

In the Upper Paleolithic, hunting techniques became more complex. At this time, house-building was born and a new way of life was taking shape. Thinking and speech develop. A person’s mental horizons expand and his spiritual world is enriched.

The deep archaism of the earliest cave images is reflected in the fact that the emergence of the most ancient of them, the early Aurignacian ones, was caused at first glance by seemingly random associations in the minds of primitive man, who noticed the similarity in the outlines of stones or rocks with the appearance of certain animals.

Sculptural figure of a woman carved from mammoth ivory (front and profile). Kostenki I. From excavations in 1952

But already in Aurignacian times, along with examples of archaic art that combine natural resemblance and human creativity, images were also widespread that owe their appearance entirely to the creative imagination of primitive people.

Very early, back in Aurignacian times, round sculpture began to appear along with drawings and bas-reliefs. As a rule, it was an image of a woman.

The figurines were discovered in various Upper Paleolithic settlements of the periglacial zone, which extended from the Mediterranean Sea to Lake Baikal.

Along with plastic images of women, the art of the Upper Paleolithic is characterized by sculptural images of animals made from mammoth tusk, bone, and even clay mixed with bone ash, equally true to nature. Often such figures depicted mammoths, bison, horses and other animals, including predators.

Many interesting finds were discovered in Kostenki, already known to the reader. The two figurines discovered here are remarkable for their life-like depiction of the forms of the naked female body and expressiveness. A whole series of miniature heads and figures of animals carved from marl, a soft local stone, was found in Kostenki. There are predators here, such as a lion and a bear, and there is also a beautifully designed camel head.

In Ukraine, in Mezin, figurines of birds of prey, completely unusual in their unique stylization, covered with a rich geometric pattern, were discovered.

In Malta and Bureti (on the Angara River) sculptural figurines of waterfowl depicted in flight, with a long neck stretched forward and a massive head, were found. Most likely these are loons or swans.

Mammoth figurines carved from the foot bones of the mammoth itself were discovered at the Avdeevskaya site.

Exactly the same figurines were found in Predmost, in Slovakia.

The accuracy and sharpness of observations reflected in the images of animals were determined by the daily work experience of ancient hunters, whose entire life and well-being depended on knowledge of the lifestyle and character of animals, on the ability to track and catch them. Such knowledge of the animal world was a matter of life and death for primitive hunters, and penetration into the life of animals was a characteristic and important part of human psychology. Moreover, to such an extent that it colored their entire spiritual culture, starting, judging by ethnographic data, from animal epics and fairy tales, where animals are the only or main characters, ending with rituals and myths in which people and animals represent one whole.

Paleolithic art gave people of that time satisfaction with the correspondence of images to nature, the clarity and symmetrical arrangement of lines, and the strength of the color scheme of these images.

Often the simplest everyday things were covered with ornaments and given sculptural forms. Such are, say, daggers, the handle of which is turned into a figurine of a deer or a goat, such as a spear thrower with the image of a partridge.

Songs and dances were an important type of primitive art. Primitive dances, most of them imitative, represent a reproduction of the rhythm of labor activity. Often during such dances scenes of gathering, hunting, fishing, etc. were imitated.

There were also war dances, which were usually performed before setting out on a campaign.

The origin of the dance dates back to the Magdalenian era. Dance is directly related to song and instrumental music, which arose from the rhythms of labor processes. The close connection between these two types of primitive art is proven by the fact that many tribes refer to songs and dances in one word. Primitive song consisted of rhythmic speech. The basis was the recitative, and the melody arose later.

It should be noted that primitive people created all types of musical instruments - percussion (from bone, wood or a stretched piece of leather), string or plucked instruments (their prototype was the bow string), wind instruments from hollow wood and tubular bone.

Rattles and drums became especially widespread.

Music, as a rule, accompanied dances that narrated numerous exploits of important hunters, warriors, etc.

Tubular bones with lateral holes were discovered in Late Paleolithic settlements. In Ukraine, in the Chernigov region, in a hut made of mammoth bones, two bone knockers, a noisy bracelet made of five bone plates and a hammer made of reindeer antler were found.

Some scientists believe that these objects are musical instruments of an ancient orchestra.

Of course, music in primitive society as a whole was poorly developed, which is explained by the low level of technology in general, and, consequently, the technology of making musical instruments.

Folklore began to develop very early among primitive people. The first to appear were legends about the past, myths, and later - fairy tales, songs, epics, riddles, and proverbs.

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The probable reasons for the emergence of labor activity are seen in the light of the above data in greater efficiency in the use of resources when using tools. Chimpanzees can live well without tools, but with them their life becomes easier and more varied. The connection between the use of tools and the biological evolution of human ancestors is quite obvious - developed tool activity became possible only in fully upright primates with a free hand. We can distinguish three biological complexes associated with the ability to make and use tools: bipedal complex(making possible the active and free use of hands), hand structure complex(including opposable thumb and extended short distal phalanges) and complex of developed brain(in which the development of the frontal lobe, which is responsible for learning and thinking in a broad sense, and the parietal lobe, which is responsible for the sensitivity of the hand and the coordination of conscious movements of the hands, is fundamentally important for tool activity). An important factor in the emergence of tool activity was changes in the type of nutrition of human ancestors, the transition to omnivory.

Bones with traces of tool processing, 3.4 million years old, found in Ethiopia. The authors of the find believe that Australopithecus afarensis used stone tools.
Source: McPherron Shannon P., et al. "Evidence for stone-tool-assisted consumption of animal tissues before 3.39 million years ago at Dikika, Ethiopia." Nature. 466 (2010): 857-860.

Australopithecines were unlikely to be able to make tools, although they certainly used them (see, for example, the material on the possible use of tools by Australopithecines afarensis). Their hands were very similar to humans, but the fingers were more curved and narrower. The oldest tools are known from layers in Ethiopia dating to 2.7 million years ago, that is, 4 million years after the appearance of Australopithecus. In South Africa, Australopithecines or their immediate descendants used bone fragments to catch termites from termite mounds about 2-1.5 million years ago. Gracile australopithecines ate mainly plant foods, although not far from bones Australopithecusgarhi scientists found stone tools and the bones of antelopes crushed by them (however, at that moment there already existed “early Homo"who used pebble tools, so Australopithecusgarhi is a dead-end alternative line of evolution). Also, for the South African australopithecus, a hypothesis was put forward osteodontokeratic("bone-dental-horny") culture. It was assumed that Australopithecines used bones, horns and teeth of animals as tools. Later studies showed that most of the wear marks on these bones were the result of gnawing by hyenas and other predators.

The oldest traces of stone tools on bones were found in Ethiopia in the Hadar area and date back to more than 3 million years ago, although the tools themselves are unknown, and many archaeologists doubt that these incisions were made by tools. The oldest real stone tools are known from the Gona site in Ethiopia and date back to 2.5-2.7 million years ago, their manufacturers are unknown. About 2.5 million years ago new species of hominids arose that had a large brain and were already assigned to the genus Homo. However, there was another group of late australopithecines that deviated from the line leading to humans - the massive Australopithecus or Paranthropus, which also probably made and used stone tools. Paranthropus were large - weighing up to 70 kg - specialized herbivorous creatures that lived along the banks of rivers and lakes in dense thickets. Their lifestyle was somewhat reminiscent of the lifestyle of modern gorillas. However, they retained a bipedal gait and may have been able to make tools. In the layers with Paranthropus, stone tools and bone fragments were found, which hominids used to tear up termite mounds. Also, the hand of these primates was adapted for the manufacture and use of tools.

About 2.588 million years ago, the Pleistocene began - the longest section of the Quaternary period of the geological history of the Earth, or rather its earliest part - the Gelazian stage. At this time, significant changes occurred both in the Earth's climate and in its biosphere. Another decrease in temperature led to a decrease in the evaporation of water from the ocean surface, as a result of which the forests of East Africa began to be replaced by savannas. Faced with a lack of traditional plant foods (fruits), the ancestors of modern humans began to look for more accessible food sources in the dry savannah.

It is believed that the earliest, crudest and most primitive stone tools currently found, made by the ancestors of modern man, date back to around this time (2.5-2.6 million years ago). Although quite recently, in May 2015, the journal Nature published the results of research and excavations in Lomekwi, where tools made by an as yet unidentified hominid were found, whose age is estimated at 3.3 million years. This is how the lower or early paleolithic– the most ancient part of the Paleolithic ( ancient stone age). In other regions of the planet, the production of stone tools (and, accordingly, the onset of the Paleolithic) began later. In Western Asia this happened about 1.9 million years ago, in the Middle East - about 1.6 million years ago, in Southern Europe - about 1.2 million years ago, in Central Europe - less than a million years ago.

Probably one of the first species of australopithecus to make stone tools was Australopithecus garhi (lat. Australopithecus garhi). His remains, about 2.6 million years old, were discovered only relatively recently, in 1996. Along with them, the most ancient stone tools were found, as well as animal bones with traces of processing with these tools.

Approximately 2.33 million years ago, Homo habilis (lat. Homo habilis) appeared, possibly descended from Australopithecus gari. Adapting to the savannah climate, he included roots, tubers and animal meat in his diet in addition to traditional fruits. At the same time, the first people were content with the role of scavengers, scraping off the remains of meat from the skeletons of animals killed by predators with stone scrapers, and extracting bone marrow from bones split by stones. It was Habilis who created, developed and spread the Olduvai culture in Africa, which flourished between 2.4 and 1.7 million years ago. At the same time as Homo habilis, there was another species - Rudolf man (lat. Homo rudolfensis), however, due to the extremely small number of finds, very little is known about him.

About 1.806 million years ago, the next - Calabrian - stage of the Pleistocene began, and around the same time two new species of people appeared: a working person (lat. Homo ergaster) and a erect person (lat. Homo erectus). The most important change in the morphology of these species was a significant increase in brain size. Homo erectus soon migrated from Africa and spread widely throughout Europe and Asia, moving from a scavenger role to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle that dominated the rest of the Paleolithic. Along with erectus, the Olduvai culture also spread (in Europe, before Leakey’s discoveries, it was known as Chelles and Abbeville). A man working in Africa soon created a more advanced Acheulian culture of stone processing, but it spread to Europe and the Middle East only after hundreds of thousands of years, and did not reach Southeast Asia at all. At the same time, in Europe, in parallel with the Acheulean, another culture arose - the Klektonian. According to various estimates, it existed in a period of time from 300 to 600 thousand years ago and was named after the city of Clacton-on-Sea in Essex (Great Britain), near which corresponding stone tools were found in 1911. Similar instruments were later found in Kent and Suffolk. The creator of these instruments was Homo erectus.

Approximately 781 thousand years ago, the Ionian stage of the Pleistocene began. At the beginning of this period, another new species appeared in Europe - Heidelberg man (lat. Homo heidelbergensis). He continued to lead a hunter-gatherer lifestyle and used stone tools belonging to the Acheulean culture, but somewhat more advanced.

Some time later - according to various estimates from 600 to 350 thousand years ago - the first people appeared, with Neanderthal features or protoanderthals.

The first attempts by man to use fire date back to the Early Paleolithic. However, fairly reliable evidence of fire control dates back to the very end of this period - a time about 400 thousand years ago.

Middle Paleolithic

The Middle Paleolithic replaced the Early Paleolithic about 300 thousand years ago and lasted until about 30 thousand years ago (in different regions the time boundaries of the period may differ significantly). During this time, significant changes occurred in all spheres of life of primitive humanity, coinciding with the emergence of new species of people.

From the proto-neanderthals that arose at the end of the Early Paleolithic, the classical Neanderthal (lat. Homo neanderthalensis) was formed by the second half of the Middle Paleolithic (approximately 100-130 thousand years ago).

Neanderthals, who lived in small related groups, were able to perfectly adapt to the cold climate during the last ice age and populated large areas of Europe and Asia that were not covered with ice. Survival in harsh climates was made possible by a number of changes in the lives of these ancient people. They created and developed the Mousterian culture, which used Levallois techniques for stone processing and was the most progressive throughout most of the Middle Paleolithic. The improvement of hunting weapons (spears with stone tips) and a high level of interaction with their fellow tribesmen allowed Neanderthals to successfully hunt the largest land mammals (mammoths, bison, etc.), whose meat formed the basis of their diet. The invention of the harpoon made it possible to successfully catch fish, which became an important source of food in coastal areas. To protect themselves from the cold and predators, Neanderthals used shelter in caves and fire, and they also cooked food on fire. To preserve meat for future use, they began to smoke and dry it. An exchange with other groups of valuable raw materials (ochre, rare high-quality stone for making tools, etc.) that were unavailable in the area in which one or another group lived was developed.

Archaeological evidence and comparative ethnography studies indicate that Middle Paleolithic people lived in egalitarian (egalitarian) societies. Equal distribution of food resources avoided starvation and increased the community's chances of survival. Members of the group took care of injured, sick and old fellow tribesmen, as evidenced by remains with traces of healed injuries and at a considerable age (of course, by Paleolithic standards - about 50 years). Neanderthals often buried their dead, leading some scientists to conclude that they developed religious beliefs and concepts, such as belief in life after death. This can be evidenced, among other things, by the orientation of the graves, the characteristic poses of those who died in them, and the burial of utensils with them. However, other scientists believe that the burials were carried out for rational reasons. The development of thinking was manifested in the appearance of the first examples of art: rock paintings, decorative items made of stone, bone, etc.

About 195 thousand years ago, anatomically modern Homo sapiens appeared in Africa. According to the currently dominant hypothesis of the African origin of man, after several tens of millennia, anatomically modern people began to gradually spread beyond Africa. There is some evidence that about 125 thousand years ago, having crossed the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, they appeared on the Arabian Peninsula (the territory of modern UAE), a little later - about 106 thousand years ago - on the territory of modern Oman, and about 75 thousand years ago - possibly on the territory of modern India. Although no human remains have been found in those places dating back to this time, the obvious similarities between stone tools found there and in Africa suggest that they were created by modern man. Another group of people, passing through the Nile Valley, reached the territory of modern Israel about 100-120 thousand years ago. The settlers moving south and east gradually populated south-east Asia, and then, taking advantage of the reduced sea level due to glaciation, about 50 thousand years ago they reached Australia and New Guinea, and a little later, about 30 thousand years ago - and numerous islands east of Australia.

The first anatomically modern humans (Cro-Magnons) entered Europe through the Arabian Peninsula about 60 thousand years ago. About 43 thousand years ago, large-scale colonization of Europe began, during which Cro-Magnons actively competed with Neanderthals. In terms of physical strength and adaptability to the climate of Europe during the glaciation period, the Cro-Magnons were inferior to the Neanderthals, but were ahead of them in technological development. And after 13-15 thousand years, by the end of the Middle Paleolithic, the Neanderthals were completely forced out of their habitat and became extinct.

Along with the Mousterian culture itself, in the Middle Paleolithic era its local variants also existed in some regions. Very interesting in this regard is the Aterian culture in Africa, which was discovered at the beginning of the 20th century near the city of Bir el-Ather in eastern Algeria, after which it was named. Initially, it was believed that it first appeared about 40 thousand years ago, then this boundary was pushed back to 90-110 thousand years. In 2010, the Moroccan Ministry of Culture published a press release reporting that in the prehistoric caves of Ifri n'Amman, objects of Aterian culture dating back up to 175 thousand years were discovered. In addition to stone tools, drilled mollusk shells were also found at Aterian sites , presumably serving as jewelry, which indicates the development of aesthetic feelings in humans.In Europe, there were such early and transitional varieties of Mousterian as the Teillac and Micoq industries.In the Middle East, the Emirian culture developed from Mousterian.

During the same period, there were also independent cultures in Africa, formed from the earlier Acheulean, such as Sangoi and Stilbeian. The Howiesons-Port culture, which arose (possibly from the Stilbeian) in South Africa about 64.8 thousand years ago, is very interesting. In terms of the level of production of stone tools, it corresponds rather to the cultures of the beginning of the Late Paleolithic, which appeared 25 thousand years later. We can say that in terms of its level it was significantly ahead of its time. However, having existed for just over 5 thousand years, it disappeared approximately 59.5 thousand years ago, and tools from more primitive cultures reappeared in the region of its distribution.

Late Paleolithic

The Late Paleolithic - the third and final stage of the Paleolithic - began about 40-50 thousand years ago and ended about 10-12 thousand years ago. It was during this period that modern man became first the dominant and then the only representative of his own species. The changes in the life of mankind during this period are so significant that they are called the Late Paleolithic revolution.

During the Late Paleolithic, significant climate changes occurred in areas inhabited by humans. Since the vast majority of the period occurred during the last ice age, the overall climate of Eurasia varied from cold to temperate. Along with climate changes, the area of ​​the ice sheet changed, and, accordingly, the area of ​​human distribution. Moreover, if in the northern regions the territory suitable for habitation decreased, then in the more southern regions it increased due to a significant decrease in the level of the World Ocean, the waters of which were concentrated in glaciers. So, during the maximum of the Ice Age, which occurred 19-26.5 thousand years ago, sea level fell by about 100-125 m. Therefore, many archaeological evidence of human life who lived on the coast in those days is now hidden by the waters of the seas and is located at a considerable distance from the modern coastline. On the other hand, glaciation and low sea levels allowed man to move across the Bering Isthmus that existed at that time to North America.

Since the beginning of the Late Paleolithic, the variety of artifacts left by people has increased significantly. Manufactured instruments are becoming more specialized, and their manufacturing technologies are becoming more complex. Important achievements are the invention of various types of tools and weapons. In particular, about 30 thousand years ago a spear thrower and a boomerang were invented, 25-30 thousand years ago - a bow and arrow, 22-29 thousand years ago - a fishing net. Also at this time, a sewing needle with an eye, a fishing hook, a rope, an oil lamp, etc. were invented. One of the most important achievements of the Late Paleolithic can be called the taming and domestication of the dog, which, according to various estimates, occurred 15-35 thousand years ago (and possibly earlier). A dog has much better developed hearing and sense of smell than a human, which makes it an indispensable assistant in protecting against predators and hunting. More advanced tools and weapons, methods of hunting, building housing and making clothing allowed people to significantly increase their numbers and populate previously undeveloped territories. The earliest evidence of organized human settlements dates back to the Late Paleolithic. Some were used year-round, although more often people moved from one settlement to another depending on the season, following food sources.

Instead of a single dominant culture, various regional cultures with numerous local varieties arise in different places, existing partly simultaneously and partly replacing each other. In Europe, these are the Chatelperonian, Seletian, Aurignacian, Gravettian, Solutrean, Badegulian and Magdalenian cultures. In Asia and the Middle East - Baradostian, Zarzian and Kebarian.

In addition, during this period the flourishing of fine and decorative arts began: Late Paleolithic man left many rock paintings and petroglyphs, as well as artistic products made of ceramics, bone and horn. One of the ubiquitous varieties is female figurines, the so-called Paleolithic Venus.

  • Paleolithic (Greek παλαιός - ancient + Greek λίθος - stone; = ancient stone) - the first historical period of the Stone Age from the beginning of the use of stone tools by hominids (genus Homo) (about 2.5 million years ago) until the advent of agriculture in humans approximately 10 millennium BC e.. Isolated in 1865 by John Lubbock. The Paleolithic is the era of the existence of fossil humans, as well as fossil, now extinct animal species. It occupies most (about 99%) of the time of human existence and coincides with two large geological epochs of the Cenozoic era - the Pliocene and Pleistocene.

    In the Paleolithic era, the Earth's climate, its flora and fauna were significantly different from modern ones. People of the Paleolithic era lived in small primitive communities and used only chipped stone tools, not yet knowing how to polish them and make pottery - ceramics. However, in addition to stone tools, tools were also made from bone, leather, wood and other materials of plant origin. They hunted and collected plant foods. Fishing was just beginning to emerge, and agriculture and cattle breeding were unknown.

    The beginning of the Paleolithic (2.5 million years ago) coincides with the appearance on Earth of the most ancient ape-like people, archanthropes such as Olduvai Homo habilis. At the end of the Paleolithic, the evolution of hominids ends with the appearance of the modern species of people (Homo sapiens). At the very end of the Paleolithic, people began to create ancient works of art, and signs of the existence of religious cults appeared, such as rituals and burials. The Paleolithic climate changed several times from glacial to interglacial periods, becoming warmer and colder.

    The end of the Paleolithic dates back to approximately 12-10 thousand years ago. This is the time of transition to the Mesolithic - an intermediate era between the Paleolithic and Neolithic.

    The Paleolithic is conventionally divided into Lower and Upper, although many researchers also distinguish the Middle Paleolithic from the Lower Paleolithic. More detailed divisions of the Upper or Late Paleolithic are only local in nature, since the various archaeological cultures of this period are not represented everywhere. The time boundaries between divisions in different regions may also differ, since archaeological cultures did not succeed each other at the same time.

    In the 19th century, Gabriel de Mortillier identified the Eolithic as the era preceding the Paleolithic. Currently, the term is not used; the Mortilier criteria are recognized as erroneous. In addition, in Russian-language archaeological literature, the Upper and Middle Paleolithic are sometimes designated by the term “archaeolithic”.