Image courtesy of Reuters
Joel Kontinen
A set of stone tools found in Kenya is the oldest of its kind, and one of
the oldest known to have been made by so called ancient hominins. The find adds
to the evidence for widespread tool use relatively early in human evolution.
Darwinians claim that the artefacts were found with two teeth belonging to what they call hominins called Paranthropus. They weren’t thought to make tools because their teeth were well-suited to chewing food, but the new find suggests they actually did make and use stone tools.
Evolutionists have found a fossil Paranthropus robustus that shows that males and females were of equal sixe and that P. robustus was a large toothed, small-brained hominin.
Source:
Marshall, Michael, 2023, Early hominin Paranthropus may have used sophisticated stone tools, Nëw Scientist, 9 February.