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Ancient Wooden Tools: Oldest Ever Discovered (430,000 Years Old)

by Lisa Park - Tech Editor

Researchers working in ⁣southern Greece have identified the ‌oldest known handheld⁣ wooden tools,⁣ dated too ⁤about ‍430,000 years ago.The⁤ objects came from Marathousa 1, a ⁣site in the Megalopolis Basin in the central Peloponnese. The area once held a lakeshore during the ‌Middle Pleistocene, a period between about 774,000 and 129,000 years ago.

Specimen Marathousa ID 13, the small wooden ⁤tool which is a new wood tool type,⁣ documented ⁣here for the first‌ time. Currently its function‍ is not known. ⁣Credit: Photograph by N. Thompson, © K. Harvati

Excavations at Marathousa 1 have produced stone flakes, animal bones with cut marks, ‌and the remains of a straight-tusked elephant. Archaeologists link these finds⁢ to ‌repeated visits by early humans who processed large carcasses near water. Waterlogged sediments at the site created low oxygen conditions. Such‌ conditions slowed decay ‌and preserved pieces of wood that usually‌ rot away over long⁤ spans ⁣of time.

Researchers examined dozens of wood fragments under microscopes.They‍ studied surface marks, internal structure, and wood‌ species. this ‌work helped the team separate human modification from damage caused by roots, sediment pressure, or animals.Two fragments showed ⁣clear signs of shaping and use.

One piece comes from alder. The surface shows cut‍ marks from stone tools and rounded areas formed through repeated contact with soil. The shape and wear fit use as a digging stick near the ​lakeshore. Such a⁣ tool would have helped with‌ loosening wet ground‌ or extracting plant foods. The second artifact, a very small fragment from willow ⁢or poplar, shows carved edges and smoothing from handling. The size points to‌ a finger held tool. Researchers link ‍this piece ⁢to fine⁣ tasks, ​such as adjusting stone flakes during tool production.

Marathousa ID 14, the small wooden tool which is a new wood tool ⁣type, documented here for the first time. Currently its function is not ⁢known.⁢ Credit: Photograph ⁤by N. Thompson, © K. Harvati
Marathousa ID 14,‌ the small wooden tool which is a new wood tool type, documented here for the first time. Currently its function is​ not known. Credit: ⁤Photograph by N. Thompson, © K.⁣ Harvati

from the same layers, the wooden​ pieces show broad knowledge of natural materials and varied technical skill during the Middle ​Pleistocene.

Publication: A. Milks et al. (2026). Evidence⁣ for the earliest hominin use of wooden handheld tools found​ at Marathousa 1 (Greece), Proc.‍ Natl.‌ Acad. Sci.U.S.A. 123 (6) e2515479123, doi:10.1073/pnas.2515479123

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