Ancient Whale-Bone Tools Reveal Frontier of Human Ingenuity for Coastal Societies
New archaeological findings illuminate how prehistoric hunter-gatherers on Europe’s Atlantic coast crafted sophisticated tools from whale bones nearly 20,000 years ago. Reports in high-profile journals highlight large projectile points and other implements made from gray whale bones, uncovered in a Duruthy rockshelter in Landes, France. Radiocarbon dating places these artifacts in the Late Paleolithic Magdalenian period, a time when Europe remained heavily glaciated and coastal communities relied on diverse resources.