From the dawn of our
species to the present day, stone-made artefacts are the dominant form of
material remains that have survived to today concerning human technology.
The term Stone Age
was coined in the late 19th century CE by the Danish scholar Christian J.
Thomsen, who came up with a framework for the study of the human past, known as
the “Three Age System”. The basis of this framework is technological: it
revolves around the notion of three successive periods or ages: Stone
Age,Bronze Age, and Iron Age, each age being
technologically more complex than the one before it. Thomsen came up with this
idea after noticing that the artefacts found in archaeological sites displayed
regularity in terms of the material that they were made with: stone-made tools
were always found in the deepest layers,Bronze artefacts in layers on top of the
deepest layers, and finally Iron -made
artefacts were found closest to the surface. This suggested that metal
technology developed later than stone-made tools.
This “Three Age
System” has received some criticism. There are scholars who believe that this
approach is too technologically oriented. Others say that this
stone-bronze-iron pattern has hardly any meaning when applied outside Europe. Despite the critics, this
system is still largely used today and, although it has limitations, it can be
helpful as long as we remember that it is a simplified framework.
CHRONOLOGY OF THE STONE
AGE
The Stone Age begins
with the first production of stone implements and ends with the first use of
bronze. Since the chronological limits of the Stone Age are based on
technological development rather than actual date ranges, its length varies in
different areas of the world. The earliest global date for the beginning of the
Stone Age is 2.5 million years ago in Africa, and the earliest end date is
about 3300 BCE, which is the beginning of Bronze Age in the Near East.
There
is evidence suggesting that the 2.5 million year limit for stone tool
manufacture might be pushed further back. The reason is that the capacity of
tool use and even its manufacture is not exclusive of our species: there are
studies indicating that bonobos are capable of flaking and using stone tools in
order to gain access to food in an experimental setting. Nevertheless, there
are differences between the tools produced by modern apes and those produced by
the early toolmakers, who had better biomechanical and cognitive skills and
produced more efficient tools. The difference, however, is of degree, not of
nature. In fact, the earliest tools pre-date the emergence of the Homo genus,
and it is believed that some of the Australopithecines were the first tool
makers.
In addition, some
researchers have claimed that the earliest stone tools might even have an
earlier origin: 3.4 million years ago. Although no stone tools that old have
been found, some bones showing signs of striations and gouges have been found
in Ethiopia, which might represent cut marks made with stone tools. This view,
however, is not widely accepted: the marks have also been interpreted to be the
result of crocodile predation or animal trampling.
The Stone Age is
also divided into three different periods.
1. Paleolithic or Old
Stone Age: from the first production of stone artefacts, about 2.5
million years ago, to the end of the last Ice Age, about 9,600 BCE. This is the
longest Stone Age period.
The
main types of evidence are fossilized human remains and stone tools, which show
a gradual increase in their complexity. On the basis of the techniques employed
and the quality of the tools, there are several stone industries (sometimes
referred to as “lithic” industries). The earliest of these (2.5 million years
ago) is called Oldowan, which are very simple choppers and flakes. About 1.7
million years ago, we find another type of lithic industry called Acheulean,
producing more complex and symmetrical shapes with sharp edges. There are
several other types of lithic industries until finally towards the end of the
Paleolithic, about 40,000 years ago, we see a “revolution” of lithic industries
where many different types coexisted and developed rapidly. Around this same
time, we also have the first recorded expressions of the artistic life:
personal ornaments, cave paintings, and mobilary art.
2. Mesolithic or Middle
Stone Age: In purely scientific terms, the Mesolithic begins at the end
of a period known in geology as the Younger Dryas stadial, the last cold snap,
which marks the end of Ice Age, about 9,600 BCE. The Mesolithic period ends
when agriculture starts.
This is the time of the late hunter-gatherers.
Because
agriculture developed at different times in different regions of the world,
there is no single date for the end of the Mesolithic period. Even within a
specific region, agriculture developed during different times. For example,
agriculture first developed in Southeast Europe about 7,000 BCE, in Central
Europe about 5,500 BCE, and Northern Europe about 4,000 BCE. All these factors
make the chronological limits of the Mesolithic somehow fuzzy. Moreover, some
regions do not have a Mesolithic period. An example is the Near East, where
agriculture was developed around 9,000 BCE, right after the end of the Ice Age.
During
the Mesolithic period, important large-scale changes took place on our planet.
As the climate was getting warmer and the ice sheets were melting, some areas
in the northern latitudes rose as they were being freed from the weight of the
ice. At the same time, the sea levels rose, drowning low-lying areas, resulting
in major changes in the land worldwide: the Japanese islands were separated
from the Asian mainland, Tasmania from Australia, the British Isles from
continental Europe, East Asia and North America became divided by the flooding
of the Bering Strait, and Sumatra separated from Malaysia with the correspondent
formation of the Strait of Malacca. Around 5,000 BCE, the shape of the
continents and islands was very much those of the present day.
3. Neolithic or New Stone Age: begins with the introduction of farming, dating variously from c.
9,000 BCE in the Near East, c. 7,000 BCE in Southeast Europe, c. 6,000 BCE in
East Asia, and even later in other regions. This is the time when cereal
cultivation and animal domestrication was
introduced.
In
order to reflect the deep impact that agriculture had over the human
population, an Australian archaeologist named Gordon Childe popularized the
term “Neolithic Revolution” in the 1940s CE. Today it is believed that the
impact of agricultural innovation was exaggerated in the past: the development
of Neolithic culture appears to have been more gradual rather than a sudden
change.
Agriculture
brought major changes in the way human society is organized and how it uses the
earth, including forest clearance, root crops, and cereal cultivation that can
be stored for long periods of time, along with the development of new
technologies for farming and herding such as plows, irrigation systems, etc.
More intensive agriculture implies more food available for more people, more
villages, and a movement towards a more complex social and political
organization. As the population density of the villages increase, they
gradually evolve into towns and finally into cities.
Towards
the end of the Neolithic era, copper metallurgy is introduced, which marks a
transition period to the Bronze Age, sometimes referred to as Chalcolithic or
Eneolithic era.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD
Tools and weapons
during the Stone Age were not made exclusively of stone: organic materials such
as antler, bone, fibre, leather and wood were also employed. The archaeological
record, however, is biased in favour of items made of stone because these are
far more durable than the organic materials, which are easily obliterated by
the many processes of decay that they are subject to and can only survive under
rare circumstances such as cold temperatures or very dry climate. Other durable
materials such as copper and glass-made items have also survived. Under
rare circumstances, plant, animal, and human remains have also managed to
survive, sometimes merely fossilized, but other times they still present part
of the soft tissue such as the several frozen specimens of the extinct woolly
rhino and woolly mammoth that have survived in Siberia virtually intact.
Clay is another
material which is abundant in the bulk of Stone Age material remains. Clay can
be fashioned into a desire shape and baked to fix its form. This is the birth
of pottery. Usable clay is widely available, which explains why pottery was
independently invented in many parts of the world at different times. The
oldest evidence of pottery manufacture has been found in an archaeological site
known as Odai Yamamoto, in Japan, where fragments from a specific vessel have
been dated to 16,500-14,920 BP ("before present", meaning
16,500-14,920 years ago, usually associated with radiocarbon dating).
Non-agricultural Jomon peoples of Japan were producing clay pots that were
elaborately decorated by about 13,000 BP, which were used for food preparation.
During the Early
Neolithic era, around 8,000 BCE, special ovens used to parch cereal grains and
to bake bread were being built in the Near East, which allowed people to
control fire and produce high temperatures in enclosed facilities. Initially,
pottery was made in open fires, but the use of ovens added new possibilities to
the development of pottery. Around the same time, some areas of South America
were also developing pottery technology.
With the
introduction of Bronze metallurgy, the Stone Age came to an end. Bronze is a
mixture of copper and tin, which has greater hardness than copper, better
casting properties, and a lower melting point. Bronze could be used for making
weapons, something that was not possible with copper, which is not hard enough
to endure combat conditions. In time, bronze became the primary material for
tools and weapons, and a good part of the stone technology became obsolete,
signaling the end of the Stone Age.