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Hand axe

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These tools were maybe out of flint .Acheulean hand axes from Kent. The types shown are (clockwise from top) cordate, ficron and ovate. The two lower axes are reduced in scale.
Hand axe from Um-Quatfa
Gray's Inn Lane Hand Axe
Pointed flint hand axe from Gray's Inn Lane, London
Size165 mm (6 in) long
Created350,000 years ago
DiscoveredGray's Inn Lane, London
Present locationBritish Museum, London

A hand axe is a stone tool of the Lower (early) and Middle Paleolithic Stone Age. It has two faces, is similar on both sides, and does not have a handle like a modern axe. It was held directly in the hand, perhaps wrapped in a piece of leather.

The first stone tools were probably made by Australopithecines.[1][2] They are found in the Great Rift Valley of Africa from about 3.3 million years ago.[3][2] The hand axe cultures were preceded by an even older Oldowan culture of primitive stone tools (2.6 to 1.7 million years ago) in Africa.[4][5]

At least a million and a half years ago,[1] earlier species of man (like Homo erectus and Homo neanderthalensis)[6] began making hand axes. This became one of their most important tools. Hand axes are typical of the Acheulean and the Mousterian cultures.

In northern Pakistan, archaeologists have found 500,000-year-old Acheulean hand axes.[7] In eastern Asia, people occasionally made hand axes, but usually made choppers or flakes instead, according to new archaeological evidence from Baise in Guangxi, China.[8] The authors say "The stone tool assemblage shows close associations with the pebble tool industry... in South China".[8]

In 2008, archaeologists found twenty-eight 100,000-year-old hand axes in the North Sea off the coast of the United Kingdom.[9]

The Movius Line divides the Old World into two parts. To the west are the hand axe areas, and to the east are the chopper or flake-and-chip areas. Historians think there were at least two different cultural traditions.

Production

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High-quality tools recovered from Boxgrove quarry, Made c. 500,000 years ago, they are attributed to either Homo heidelbergensis or early H. neanderthalensis.

Older hand axes were produced by hitting a piece of stone with a stone hammer. This produced a thick stone tool with a curvy border. Later Mousterian handaxes were produced with a soft billet of antler or wood.[10] They had straight borders, and were much thinner and more symmetrical than older hand axes.[10]

An experienced flintknapper needs less than 15 minutes to produce a good-quality hand axe. A simple hand axe can be made from a beach pebble in less than 3 minutes.

Raw materials

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Most hand axes were made of flint. Sometimes rhyolites, phonolites, quartzites and other coarse rocks were used as well, depending on what was available in the area. Obsidian was sometimes used,[11] but is not widely found. It produces a brilliant and extremely sharp blade, but it shatters more easily than flint.

Hand axes have been found in several basic shapes, including ovals, triangles, and heart shapes. Archaeologists do not agree about why people used these different shapes.

Function

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Hand axes were multi-purpose tools.[9] Many were used for butchering meat, according to research on hand axe artifacts' cutting edges. Butchering included extracting bone marrow (which would explain the tool's pointed end) and hacking through bone, muscle and tendons. Experiments at Boxgrove quarry seem to support this idea.

Neanderthals were hunters of large mammals such as mammoths. The same may be true of other hand axe cultures. This explains the need for such a heavy tool. Using a hand axe requires considerable strength, but Neanderthals had greater upper body strength than human species.

In studies done in the 1990s at Boxgrove, a butcher attempted to cut up a carcass with a hand axe. The hand axe proved to be perfect for getting at bone marrow, which is high in protein and vitamins and thus was highly prized as a food source.[12][13]

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References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 "Handaxes Rock the Stone Age | Arizona State Museum". Arizona State Museum. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Harmand, Sonia et al 2015. 3.3-million-year-old stone tools from Lomekwi 3, West Turkana, Kenya. Nature 521, 310–315. [1]
  3. Morelle, Rebecca 2015. Oldest stone tools pre-date earliest humans. BBC News Science & Environment. [2]
  4. Callow P. 1994. The Olduvai bifaces: technology and raw materials. In M.D. Leakey & D.A. Roe (eds) Olduvai Gorge vol 5. Cambridge. p235-253.
  5. Kuman K. 1996. The Oldowan Industry from Sterkfontein: raw materials and core forms. In: R. Soper & G. Pwiti (eds) Aspects of African Archaeology. Papers from the 10th Congress of the Pan-African Association for Prehistory and Related Studies. Univ. of Zimbabwe Publications. Harare.
  6. "Shoreham: Boy discovers Neanderthal hand axe on beach". www.bbc.com. 2024-11-27. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  7. "India - Paleolithic, Prehistory, Archaeology | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2025-04-09. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Stone artifacts found from the Gonglou Site in Baise Basin, Guangxi, China [3]
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Palaeolithic Handaxes from the North Sea | Our Work | Wessex Archaeology". www.wessexarch.co.uk. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Mousterian Handaxe". Museum of Stone Tools. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  11. Milligan, Mark (2023-01-27). "New discovery places mass obsidian hand axe production to 1.2 million years ago". HeritageDaily - Archaeology News. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  12. Bergmann C.A & Roberts M.B. 1988. Flaking technology at the Acheulean site of Boxgrove, West Sussex, England. Rev. Arch. Picardie, special number.
  13. Pitts, Michael and Roberts, Mark 1998. Fairweather Eden: life in Britain half a million years ago as revealed by the excavations at Boxgrove. London: Arrow. ISBN 978-0099644910.