Recent discoveries in archaeology and palaeoanthropology highlight that stone stool knapping could have emerged first within the genera Australopithecus or Kenyanthropus rather than Homo. To explore the implications of this hypothesis determining the physical demands and motor control needed for performing the percussive movements during the oldest stone toolmaking technology (i.e. Lomekwian) would help. We analysed the joint-angle patterns and muscle activity of a knapping expert using three stone tool replication techniques: unipolar flaking on passive hammer (PH), bipolar flaking on anvil (BP), multidirectional and multifacial flaking with free hand (FH). PH presents high levels of activity for Biceps brachii and the wrist extensors and...
Differences in grip techniques used across primates are usually attributed to variation in thumb-fin...
Stone artifacts are critical for investigating the evolution of hominin behavior—they are among our ...
Modern humans possess a highly derived thumb that is substantially stronger and more robust than the...
International audienceRecent discoveries in archaeology and palaeoanthropology highlight that stone ...
It is widely agreed that biomechanical stresses imposed by stone tool behaviors influenced the evolu...
Ergonomic relationships that minimize muscle activity relative to the creation of cutting stress und...
The earliest direct evidence for tool-use by our ancestors are 2.6 million year old stone tools from...
Objectives As is the case among many complex motor tasks that require prolonged practice before ach...
Relative to the hominin fossil record there is an abundance of lithic artefacts within Pleistocene s...
Actes du workshop de Pont-à-Mousson, 21-24 novembre 2001The emergence of stone knapping has often be...
Reconstructing ancient technical gestures associated with simple tool actions is crucial for underst...
AbstractWhile no consensus allows explaining how and when human-like traits arose in fossil hominin ...
Abstract: For over 3 million years hominins held stone-cutting tools in the hand, gripping the porti...
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulf...
Early stone tools provide direct evidence of human cognitive and behavioral evolution that is otherw...
Differences in grip techniques used across primates are usually attributed to variation in thumb-fin...
Stone artifacts are critical for investigating the evolution of hominin behavior—they are among our ...
Modern humans possess a highly derived thumb that is substantially stronger and more robust than the...
International audienceRecent discoveries in archaeology and palaeoanthropology highlight that stone ...
It is widely agreed that biomechanical stresses imposed by stone tool behaviors influenced the evolu...
Ergonomic relationships that minimize muscle activity relative to the creation of cutting stress und...
The earliest direct evidence for tool-use by our ancestors are 2.6 million year old stone tools from...
Objectives As is the case among many complex motor tasks that require prolonged practice before ach...
Relative to the hominin fossil record there is an abundance of lithic artefacts within Pleistocene s...
Actes du workshop de Pont-à-Mousson, 21-24 novembre 2001The emergence of stone knapping has often be...
Reconstructing ancient technical gestures associated with simple tool actions is crucial for underst...
AbstractWhile no consensus allows explaining how and when human-like traits arose in fossil hominin ...
Abstract: For over 3 million years hominins held stone-cutting tools in the hand, gripping the porti...
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulf...
Early stone tools provide direct evidence of human cognitive and behavioral evolution that is otherw...
Differences in grip techniques used across primates are usually attributed to variation in thumb-fin...
Stone artifacts are critical for investigating the evolution of hominin behavior—they are among our ...
Modern humans possess a highly derived thumb that is substantially stronger and more robust than the...