Hand axe is a prehistoric stone tool with two faces that is the longest-used tool in human history, yet there is no academic consensus on what they were used for.
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Hand axe is a prehistoric stone tool with two faces that is the longest-used tool in human history, yet there is no academic consensus on what they were used for.
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Use of the expression hand axe has continued in English as the equivalent of the French, while biface applies more generally for any piece that has been carved on both sides by the removal of shallow or deep flakes.
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Hand axe identified that the point of another hand axe had been used as a clockwise drill.
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Apogee of hand axe manufacture took place in a wide area of the Old World, especially during the Riss glaciation, in a cultural complex that can be described as cosmopolitan and which is known as the Acheulean.
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Hand axe technology is almost unknown in Australian prehistory, although a few have been found.
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Experiments in knapping have demonstrated the relative ease with which a hand axe can be made, which could help explain their success.
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Lastly, a hand axe represents a prototype that can be refined giving rise to more developed, specialised and sophisticated tools such as the tips of various projectiles, knives, adzes and hatchets.
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Hand axe helped establish that early humans were capable of constructing relatively sophisticated tools that reflected a sense of aesthetics.
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Hand axe felt that he could recognize beauty in early prehistoric tools made during the Acheulean:.
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Hand axe made of Miorcani flint from the Cenomanian chalky marl layer of the Moldavian Plateau.
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