North African Stone Age Arrowhead, 1.6 inches

Date: c. 10,000 - 3000 BCE
Northern Africa

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Item Description:

Size: 1.6 x 0.7 inches (41 x 18 mm) 

This prehistoric tool was discovered in Northern Africa and date back to the Neolithic or Mesolithic Age (10,000 - 3,000 BC), right after the end of the last Ice Age. Due to it's shape and small size, this tool was likely used as an arrowhead.

The Stone Age lasted for roughly 3.4 million years, up until the adoption of metalworking which happened between 8700 and 2000 BC depending on the region. Both homo sapiens and other species of early humans used a primitive method known as flintknapping to craft tools, including arrowheads, knives, axes, and hammer-type instruments. The era can be divided into three periods: the Paleolithic (2.5 mya), Mesolithic (10,000 BC), and Neolithic (6,000 BC).

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