2024
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2319175121
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3.3 million years of stone tool complexity suggests that cumulative culture began during the Middle Pleistocene

Jonathan Paige,
Charles Perreault

Abstract: Cumulative culture, the accumulation of modifications, innovations, and improvements over generations through social learning, is a key determinant of the behavioral diversity across Homo sapiens populations and their ability to adapt to varied ecological habitats. Generations of improvements, modifications, and lucky errors allow humans to use technologies and know-how well beyond what a single naive individual could invent independently within their lifetime. The human dependence on c… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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