homehome Home chatchat Notifications


When did people first start wearing clothes? 120,000-year-old bone tools found in Moroccan cave shed clues

Some of the earliest clothes were made from sand fox, golden jackal, or wildcat furs and pelts.

Tibi Puiu
September 17, 2021 @ 2:44 pm

share Share

Hides drying in the sun at Chouara Tannery in Fez, Morocco, a traditional process thousands of years old. Credit: Emily Yuko Hallett, 2009.

Humans can get pretty weird with their fashion, so much so that it’s easy to forget that clothing is, first and foremost, supposed to be practical and functional. Our bare skin is rather ill-equipped to handle extreme cold, which is why clothes are so important. Without them, humans could have never migrated out of the cozily warm African savanna and survive incomprehensible long cold spells such as ice ages.

The first clothes humans wore were made from naturally available materials such as animal fur and hide, grass, leaves, bone, and shells. It’s not clear when we first starting adorning our skin with clothing, but a new study that found 120,000-year-old clothing manufacturing tools in Contrebandiers Cave on Morocco’s Atlantic Coast suggests this practice is at least that old.

The Pleistocene wardrobe

Credit: Jacopo Niccolò Cerasoni.

Researchers led by Emily Hallett of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany, initially arrived at the cave to examine bone fossils in order to determine what Pleistocene humans in the area ate. What they found instead was far more interesting.

Clothes don’t fossilize, as they decompose and vanish in just a couple hundred years. But the tools used to fashion them are much sturdier. Inside the Moroccan cave, the researchers discovered dozens of tools ideal for scraping hides and pelts to make leather and fur.

“Our findings show that early humans were manufacturing bone tools that were used to prepare skins and furs, and that this behavior is likely part of a larger tradition with earlier examples that have not yet been found,” Hallett says.

Some of the tools included bovid ribs carved into a broad, round-ended shape that is ideal for scraping and removing tissues from leathers and pelts. These tools look remarkably similar to those that craftsmen still employ today to process hides.

In total, the scientists identified 62 different bone tools dated to 90,000 to 120,000 years ago, including a whale tooth that appears to have been used as a flake stone. These tools were already specialized. But early humans must have used cruder tools to process natural when they first started making clothing, so the first clothes likely appear much earlier than this. Previously, researchers sequenced the DNA of lice known to infest clothing and found they appeared about 170,000 years ago.

Alongside the bone tools, the scientists found the remains of sand foxes, golden jackals, and wildcats exhibiting cut marks in patterns resembling those left by skinning. For instance, incisions were found at each of the animal’s four paws, performed to allow the skin to be pulled in one piece from the paws to the head. Ancient cut marks around the animal’s mouth show how Pleistocene humans removed the skin of the head.

Carnivores were skinned for fur and bone tools were then used to prepare the furs into pelts. Credit: Jacopo Niccolò Cerasoni, 2021.

The marks left on the bones of these carnivorous animals were not those you’d expect to see due to butchery, suggesting hunter-gathers were only interested in obtaining their hides. On the other hand, other animal remains, including ancient cow-like bovids, showed clear signs that their meat was processed.

The timeline of these bone tools precedes the great migration of humans out of Africa — and it makes sense. Early humans required clothing if they were to survive the trek across frigid Eurasia.

As to how these clothes must have looked like, that’s a mystery. We can only speculate if they were primarily practical to provide protection against the elements or whether they also contained symbolic ornaments.

Hallett and colleagues want to replicate these tools and experimentally manufacture clothes from natural materials available to Pleistocene hunter-gatherers. While undoubtedly fun, the goal is to better understand the kind of time and labor required in this ancient process.

share Share

Archaeologists Find Neanderthal Stone Tool Technology in China

A surprising cache of stone tools unearthed in China closely resembles Neanderthal tech from Ice Age Europe.

A Software Engineer Created a PDF Bigger Than the Universe and Yes It's Real

Forget country-sized PDFs — someone just made one bigger than the universe.

The World's Tiniest Pacemaker is Smaller Than a Grain of Rice. It's Injected with a Syringe and Works using Light

This new pacemaker is so small doctors could inject it directly into your heart.

Scientists Just Made Cement 17x Tougher — By Looking at Seashells

Cement is a carbon monster — but scientists are taking a cue from seashells to make it tougher, safer, and greener.

Three Secret Russian Satellites Moved Strangely in Orbit and Then Dropped an Unidentified Object

We may be witnessing a glimpse into space warfare.

Researchers Say They’ve Solved One of the Most Annoying Flaws in AI Art

A new method that could finally fix the bizarre distortions in AI-generated images when they're anything but square.

The small town in Germany where both the car and the bicycle were invented

In the quiet German town of Mannheim, two radical inventions—the bicycle and the automobile—took their first wobbly rides and forever changed how the world moves.

Scientists Created a Chymeric Mouse Using Billion-Year-Old Genes That Predate Animals

A mouse was born using prehistoric genes and the results could transform regenerative medicine.

Americans Will Spend 6.5 Billion Hours on Filing Taxes This Year and It’s Costing Them Big

The hidden cost of filing taxes is worse than you think.

Evolution just keeps creating the same deep-ocean mutation

Creatures at the bottom of the ocean evolve the same mutation — and carry the scars of human pollution