Experimental One-Sided Choppers Relating Neuromuscular Human Abilities to Heart Rates and Technological Evolution

Author:

Parra Igor1,Morales Luisa23ORCID,Mar Javier456,Carbonell Eudald17

Affiliation:

1. Fundación Atapuerca, Ibeas de Juarros 09198, Burgos, Spain

2. Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3052, Australia

3. FIMTE, Centro Internacional de Estudios de Música de Tecla Española, 04630 Almería, Spain

4. AP-OSI Research Unit, Alto Deba Integrated Health Care Organization, 20500 Arrasate-Mondragon, Spain

5. Kronikgune Health Research Institute, 48902 Bilbao, Spain

6. Biodonostia Health Research Institute, 20014 San Sebastian-Donostia, Spain

7. IPHES Edifici W3, Campus Sescelades URV, Zona Educacional, 4, 43007 Tarragona, Spain

Abstract

The length of time it takes to experimentally make one-sided choppers, as found in the fossil record, bears a linear relationship to the knapping process of fabricating them. In addition, this temporal frame appears to be related to human heart rates measured as beats per minute, which act as a physiological metronome. We achieved these observations, assuming that any paleolithic one-sided chopper has the information needed to estimate, quantitatively, the number of strikes on it. The experimental data allow us to establish the total timing needed for the standard fabricating of any one-sided chopper. We discuss issues derived from these experimental results, showing the evolution of human neurological abilities from 2.4 million years ago to the Modern period via the duration of time needed for making one chopper to that needed to play a 19th-century music score on a piano. Given that the neuronal and physiological distance between both actions differs by a factor of 6, we propose the concept of “technome” to measure human evolution by using methodological homogeneous metrics applied to these two human technologic objects: the chopper and the piano.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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