2.75-Million-Year-Old Stone Tools May Mark a Turning Point in Human Evolution

Not a one-off innovation but a long-standing technological tradition instead

Imagine early humans meticulously crafting stone tools for nearly 300,000 years, all while contending with recurring wildfires, droughts, and dramatic environmental shifts. A recent study, published in Nature Communications, brought to light remarkable evidence of enduring technological tradition from Kenya’s Turkana Basin. An international research team has uncovered at the Namorotukunan Site one of the oldest and longest intervals of early Oldowan stone tools yet discovered, dating from approximately 2.75 to 2.44 million years ago. These artifacts—essentially the earliest multi-purpose Swiss Army knives crafted by hominins—demonstrate that our ancestors not only survived but thrived throughout one of the most environmentally volatile periods in Earth’s history. In fact, what we may be seeing here is when our ancestors first defied a hostile world—same tools, same place, for ~300,000 years despite climate chaos. 

“This site reveals an extraordinary story of cultural continuity,” said Prof. Dr. David R. Braun (George Washington University, Max Planck Institute), who led the study. “What we’re seeing isn’t a one-off innovation—it’s a long-standing technological tradition.” “Our findings suggest that tool use may have been a more generalized adaptation among our primate ancestors,” said Prof. Dr. Susana Carvalho (Director of Science, Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique), senior author of the study. “Namorotukunan offers a rare lens on a changing world long gone—rivers on the move, fires tearing through, aridity closing in—and the tools, unwavering. For ~300,000 years, the same craft endures—perhaps revealing the roots of one of our oldest habits: using technology to steady ourselves against change,” said Dr. Dan V. Palcu Rolier, corresponding author (GeoEcoMar; Utrecht University; University of São Paulo).
 

One of the many excavated artefacts

Why is this mind-blowing?

Tech Mastery Over Hundreds of Millennia: Early hominins engineered sharp-edged stone tools with extraordinary consistency, showing advanced skill and knowledge passed down across countless generations—a steady legacy. Cutting-Edge Science with Ancient Rocks: Using volcanic ash dating, magnetic signals frozen in ancient sediments, chemical signatures of rocks, and microscopic plant remains, researchers pieced together an epic climatic saga that provides context for understanding the role of technology in human evolution. Thriving in the Face of Climate Chaos: These toolmakers lived through radical environmental upheavals. Their adaptable technology helped unlock new diets, including meat, turning hardship into a survival advantage. 

Development of the Oldowan technology. Click to enlarge

What do experts say

On the ground, the craft is remarkably consistent: “These finds show that by about 2.75 million years ago, hominins were already good at making sharp stone tools, hinting that the start of the Oldowan technology is older than we thought,” said Dr. Niguss Baraki (George Washington University). The butchery signal is clear as well: “At Namorotukunan, cutmarks link stone tools to meat eating, revealing a broadened diet that endured across changing landscapes,” said Dr. Frances Forrest (Fairfield University). “The plant fossil record tells an incredible story: the landscape shifted from lush wetlands to dry, fire-swept grasslands and semideserts,” said Dr. Rahab N. Kinyanjui (National Museums of Kenya / Max Planck Institute). “As vegetation shifted, the toolmaking remained steady. This is resilience.” 

The archaeological site in Kenia. Click to enlarge

About the study

This research was led by an international team of archaeologists, geologists, and paleoanthropologists from institutions in Kenya, Ethiopia, the United States, Brazil, Germany, India, the Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Spain, South Africa and the United Kingdom. Fieldwork was carried out under the guidance of the National Museums of Kenya and with the support of the Daasanach and Ileret communities./span>

Acknowledgments

This research was carried out with permission from the National Museums of Kenya and Kenya’s Ministry of Education, Science, and Technology, and in partnership with the Koobi Fora Field School. Funding was provided by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), the Leakey Foundation, the (PAST) Palaeontological Scientific Trust, the Dutch Research Council (NWO), the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP), the American Museum of Natural History, and the Romanian National Authority for Scientific Research (PNRR). Special thanks to Purity Kiura, Robert Moru, and all collaborators who made this work possible across institutions, countries, and communities. We thank the Daasanach community of Ileret for their warm welcome, the National Museums of Kenya for support and leadership of the Koobi Fora Field School, and Kenyan staff and local partners for their collaboration. 

Article

Braun DR, Palcu Rolier D, Advokaat EL et al., ‘Early Oldowan Technology Thrived During Pliocene Environmental Change in the Turkana Basin, Kenya’, Nature Communications, 10.1038/s41467-025-64244-x