[quote]In the rainforests of west Africa, the woodlands of Brazil and the beaches of Thailand, archaeologists have unearthed some truly remarkable stone tools.
It's not the workmanship that makes them special. If anything, a casual observer might struggle to even identify them as ancient tools. It's not their antiquity that's exceptional either: they're only about the same age as the Egyptian pyramids.
What makes these tools noteworthy is that the hands that held them weren't human.
These stone tools were wielded by chimpanzees, capuchins and macaques. The sites where they have been unearthed are the basis of a brand new field of science: primate archaeology.
The tools are crude. A chimpanzee or monkey stone hammer is hardly a work of art to rival the beauty of an ancient human hand axe. But that's not the point. These primates have developed a culture that makes routine use of a stone-based technology. That means they have entered the Stone Age.[/quote]
The article discusses how these animals also have a clear taste for cooked food over raw, and that [b][u]if[/u][/b] they were to ever be able to control fire they would likely cook their food.
Later on in the study they talk about how the chances of them advancing farther are very slim do to their environments being destroyed, and them being hunted.
Interesting none the less.
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inb4 future ethics war over whether chimps should be accepted into society equally