A 300,000-year-old throwing stick from Schöningen, northern Germany, documents the evolution of human hunting.
Nicholas J ConardJordi SerangeliGerlinde BiggaVeerle RotsPublished in: Nature ecology & evolution (2020)
The poor preservation of Palaeolithic sites rarely allows the recovery of wooden artefacts, which served as key tools in the arsenals of early hunters. Here, we report the discovery of a wooden throwing stick from the Middle Pleistocene open-air site of Schöningen that expands the range of Palaeolithic weaponry and establishes that late Lower Palaeolithic hominins in Northern Europe were highly effective hunters with a wide array of wooden weapons that are rarely preserved in the archaeological record.