When studying the proliferation of humanity across the globe, researchers have been stumped by how the islands of Southeast Asia (ISEA) became well-inhabited so long ago.
It was thought that
technological seafaring advancements to make this possible were unlikely during
the Paleolithic era. But research now shows that the ancient people of the
Philippines and ISEA may have mastered seafaring well before anyone else.
The evidence is stone
tools excavated in the Philippines, Indonesia, and Timor-Leste, which indicates
that 40,000 years ago, ancient seafarers had technological sophistication that
rivals much later civilizations.
Proving seafaring
history is tricky because wood and fiber that would have been used to construct
Paleolithic seacraft rarely survive in the archaeological record. These stone
tools show traces of plant processing to extract fibers used for making ropes,
nets, and boatbuilding bindings. When you also discover fishing hooks, gorges,
net weights, and the remains of deep-ocean fish (tuna and sharks), it is plain
these archeological sites are of a robust seafaring culture.
The remains of large
predatory fish indicate advanced seafaring capabilities as well as knowledge of
those fish species’ migration routes. The fish and tool remains show a need for
strong and well-crafted cordage for ropes and fishing lines.
It seems that ancient
seafarers constructed boats from organic materials and held them together with
ropes. The rope technology was then adapted for fishing.
Up until now, the
prevailing theory is that prehistoric migrations were passive sea drifters on
bamboo rafts. These researchers posit that such migrations were made by highly
skilled navigators who had the knowledge and technology to travel over deep
water to remote locations.
This advanced maritime
technology highlights the ingenuity of early ISEA peoples. Their boat-building
knowledge probably made the region a center for technological innovations
thousands of years ago, laying the foundation for maritime traditions that
still thrive there today.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/archaeologists-found-ancient-tools-that-contradict-the-timeline-of-civilization/ar-AA1QBNgO?ocid=hpmsn&cvid=6920dbd5e422464a91ca37688bfb70ec&ei=40