Mercader Julio, Panger Melissa, Boesch Christophe
Department of Anthropology, George Washington University, 2110 G Street NW, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
Science. 2002 May 24;296(5572):1452-5. doi: 10.1126/science.1070268.
Chimpanzees from the Tai forest of Côte d'Ivoire produce unintentional flaked stone assemblages at nut-cracking sites, leaving behind a record of tool use and plant consumption that is recoverable with archaeological methods. About 40 kilograms of nutshell and 4 kilograms of stone were excavated at the Panda 100 site. The data unearthed show that chimpanzees transported stones from outcrops and soils to focal points, where they used them as hammers to process foodstuff. The repeated use of activity areas led to refuse accumulation and site formation. The implications of these data for the interpretation of the earliest hominin archaeological record are explored.
来自科特迪瓦的塔伊森林的黑猩猩在坚果开裂地点产生了无意剥落的石器组合,留下了可通过考古方法恢复的工具使用和植物消费记录。在熊猫100遗址出土了约40公斤坚果壳和4公斤石头。挖掘出的数据表明,黑猩猩将石头从露头和土壤中运到焦点区域,在那里它们用石头作为锤子来加工食物。活动区域的反复使用导致了垃圾堆积和遗址形成。本文探讨了这些数据对解释最早的古人类考古记录的意义。