The ancestors that used Ga-Mohana Hill 105,000-years-ago made and used stone tools for their day-to-day activities. Stone tools have very sharp edges and function well for hunting and butchering, processing foraged plant foods, and scraping hides to make leather.
Tools like this one shown here are called “blades” and require special know-how and skill to make. The special strategies to make these kinds of tools were probably passed down across multiple generations.
Some types of stone are better for making stone tools than others. There are very good quality stone types at and around Ga-Mohana Hill, which may have been one of the reasons that people chose to stay in the shelters here.
Created with photogrammetry using the software Reality Capture. 135 images were captured with a Nikon D5300, 105mm Macro lens, lightbox, and turntable.
64 mm max length
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