Sediment in Nihewan might hold clues to the first Homo sapiens
Scientists unsure how old implements found in northern China are, but one expert says they could shake up theory of man's African origins
Anthropologists are thrilled - but puzzled - that sediment deposits in northern China where a large number of ancient stone tools have been unearthed appear to have been formed much earlier than the emergence of man's earliest ancestors.
More than 400 fragments of stone implements have been found in a stratum of sediment that was originally thought to have formed 15 million years ago, Professor Wei Qi, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said.
"It's quite intriguing, as the earliest Homo species who were known to be able to make tools appeared no earlier than 2.6 million years ago, in Africa," he said.
"The sediment must be considerably younger than geologists thought, because no stone tools could have appeared so early.
"But [the sediment] is still very old. If we can establish that it is older than 2.6 million years, we can give the well-established theory of African origin a big shake-up."