

A series of Stone Age geniuses invented a range of technologies that shaped human evolution and laid the foundation for our world.

By Dr. Nicholas R. Longrich
Senior Lecturer in Paleontology and Evolutionary Biology
University of Bath
Introduction
For the first few million years of human evolution, technologies changed slowly. Some 3 million years ago, our ancestors were making chipped stone flakes and crude choppers. Two million years ago, hand axes. A million years ago, humans sometimes used fire, but with difficulty. Then, 500,000 years ago, technological change accelerated, as spear points, fire-making, axes, beads, and bows appeared.
This technological revolution wasnโt the work of one people. Innovations arose in different groupsโmodern Homo sapiens, early sapiens, possibly even Neanderthalsโand then spread. Many key inventions were unique: one-offs. Instead of being invented by different people independently, they were discovered once, then shared. That implies a few clever people created many of historyโs big inventions.
And not all of them were modern humans.
The Tip of the Spear
Around 500,000 years ago in Southern Africa, archaic H. sapiens first bound stone blades to wooden spears, creating the spear point. Spear points were revolutionary as weaponry and as the first โcomposite toolsโโcombining components.
The spear point spread, appearing 300,000 years ago in East Africa and the Mideast, then 250,000 years ago in Europe wielded by Neanderthals. That pattern suggests the spear point was gradually passed on from one people to another, all the way from Africa to Europe.
Catching Fire

Four hundred thousand years ago hints of fire, including charcoal and burnt bones, became common in Europe, the Mideast, and Africa. It happened roughly the same time everywhereโrather than randomly in disconnected placesโsuggesting invention, then rapid spread. Fireโs utility is obvious, and keeping a fire going is easy. Starting a fire is harder, however, and was probably the main barrier. If so, widespread use of fire likely marked the invention of the fire drillโa stick spun against another piece of wood to create friction, a tool still used today by hunter-gatherers.
Curiously, the oldest evidence for regular fire use comes from Europeโthen inhabited by Neanderthals. Did Neanderthals master fire first? Why not? Their brains were as big as ours; they used them for something, and living through Europeโs ice-age winters, Neanderthals needed fire more than African H. sapiens.
The Axe
Two hundred and seventy thousand years ago in Central Africa, hand axes began to disappear, replaced by a new technology, the core axe. Core axes looked like small, fat hand axes but were radically different tools. Microscopic scratches show core axes were bound to wooden handlesโmaking a true, hafted axe. Axes quickly spread through Africa, then were carried by modern humans into the Arabian peninsula, Australia, and ultimately Europe.
Ornamentation
The oldest beads are 140,000 years old and come from what is today Morocco. They were made by piercing snail shells, then stringing them on a cord. At the time, archaic H. sapiens inhabited North Africa, so their makers werenโt modern humans.
Beads then appeared in Europe 115,000โ120,000 years ago, worn by Neanderthals, and may finally have been adopted by modern humans in Southern Africa 70,000 years ago.
Bow and Arrow
The oldest arrowheads appeared in Southern Africa over 70,000 years ago, likely made by the ancestors of the Bushmen, whoโve lived there for 200,000 years. Bows then may have spread to modern humans in East Africa, to South Asia 48,000 years ago, on to Europe 40,000 years ago, and finally to the Americas 12,000 years ago.
Neanderthals never adopted bows, but the timing of the bowโs spread means it was likely used by H. sapiens against them.
Trading Technology
Itโs not impossible that people invented similar technologies in different parts of the world at roughly the same time, and in some cases, this must have happened. But the simplest explanation for the archaeological data we have is that instead of reinventing technologies, many advances were made just once, then spread widely. After all, assuming fewer innovations requires fewer assumptions.
But how did technology spread? Itโs unlikely individual ancient people traveled long distances through lands held by hostile tribes (although there were obviously major migrations over generations), so humans in Africa probably didnโt meet Neanderthals in Europe, or vice versa. Instead, technology and ideas diffusedโtransferred from one band and tribe to the next, and the next, in a vast chain linking modern H. sapiens in Southern Africa to archaic humans in North and East Africa, and Neanderthals in Europe.
Conflict could have driven exchange, with people stealing or capturing tools and weapons. Some Native Americans, for example, got horses by capturing them from the Spanish. But itโs likely that people often just traded technologies, simply because it was safer and easier. Even today, modern hunter-gatherers, who often lack money, still tradeโHadzabe hunters exchange honey for iron arrowheads made by neighboring tribes, for example.
Archaeology shows such trade is ancient. Ostrich eggshell beads from South Africa, up to 30,000 years old, have been found over 300 kilometers from where they were made. About 200,000โ300,000 years ago, archaic H. sapiens in East Africa used tools from obsidian sourced from 50โ150 kilometers away, farther than modern hunter-gatherers typically travel.
Last, we shouldnโt overlook human generosityโsome exchanges may simply have been gifts. Human history was doubtless full of conflict, but then as now, tribes may have had peaceful interactionsโtreaties, marriages, friendshipsโand may simply have gifted technology to their neighbors.
Stone Age Geniuses
The pattern seen hereโsingle origin, then spread of innovationsโhas another remarkable implication. Progress may have been highly dependent on single individuals, rather than being the inevitable outcome of larger cultural forces.
Consider the bow. Itโs so useful that its invention seems both obvious and inevitable. But if it really was obvious, weโd see bows invented repeatedly in different parts of the world. But Native Americans likely didnโt invent the bowโneither did Indigenous Australian peoples, nor people in Europe and Asia.
Instead, it seems one clever Bushman may have invented the bow, and then everyone else adopted it. That hunterโs invention would change the course of human history for thousands of years to come, determining the fates of peoples and empires.

The ancient pattern resembles what weโve seen in historic times. Some innovations were developed repeatedlyโfarming, civilization, calendars, pyramids, mathematics, writing, and beer were invented independently around the world, for example. Certain inventions may be obvious enough to emerge in a predictable fashion in response to peopleโs needs.
But many key innovationsโthe wheel, gunpowder, the printing press, stirrups, the compassโseem to have been invented just once before becoming widespread.
And likewise a handful of individualsโSteve Jobs, Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla, the Wright brothers, James Watt, Archimedesโplayed outsized roles in driving our technological evolution, which implies highly creative individuals had a huge impact.
That suggests the odds of hitting on a major technological innovation are low. Perhaps it wasnโt inevitable that fire, spear points, axes, beads, or bows would be discovered when they were.
Then, as now, one person could literally change the course of history, with nothing more than an idea.
Originally published by SAPIENS, 01.13.2022, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license.


