Roughly 90,000 years ago, people living beside the Semliki River in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo stopped waiting for food to come to them. They carved barbed points from bone, waded into the current, and engineered a way to catch large catfish during seasonal spawning runs. It was a quiet decision with consequences that rippled outward for the rest of human history.
What the evidence shows
- Bone harpoons: Barbed points recovered at Katanda in the DRC date to approximately 90,000 B.C.E. — the oldest confirmed specialized fishing tools in the archaeological record.
- Early human fishing: Ten harpoon points were found at the site, each shaped to hold fast once a fish struck — showing their makers understood fish behavior, seasonal movement, and the mechanics of a fighting catfish.
- Catfish evidence: The site is layered with catfish bones, and the harpoon points are sized precisely for adult catfish, leading researchers to conclude people returned to this location every year for seasonal harvests.
The tools that rewrote the human story
The Katanda bone harpoons are not crude attempts at technology. They are symmetrical, deliberately barbed, and refined — the output of minds capable of planning ahead, anticipating an animal’s behavior, and improving a design through repeated observation and failure.
The barbed design tells us something specific: the makers understood that a large catfish fights once struck. A smooth point slides free. The barbs hold. That is an engineering solution to a behavioral observation — and it is as deliberate as anything produced thousands of years later.
This was not humanity’s first contact with aquatic food. Coastal communities had been gathering shellfish far earlier, leaving enormous shell middens — ancient food-waste deposits — that archaeologists now read like accidental diaries. But shellfish gathering is opportunistic. The Katanda tools represent something categorically different: engineered pursuit of a moving target beneath the surface.
Later refinements followed the same logic from other directions. The oldest known fish hooks — curved points carved from sea snail shells — were discovered at Sakitari Cave in Japan and date to around 23,000 B.C.E. Nets, stone weirs, and torchlit night fishing all emerged independently across cultures as people adapted the same insight to their own rivers and reefs.
How seafood may have fueled a larger brain
The nutritional consequences of early human fishing may matter as much as the tools themselves. Seafood is rich in docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), a fatty acid essential for building and maintaining brain tissue. Many anthropologists believe consistent access to aquatic foods gave early humans the biological fuel to support rapid growth in cognitive complexity — richer social structures, more sophisticated language, and longer-range planning.
Before reliable aquatic harvesting, most human diets centered on lean terrestrial game and wild plants. Both are nutritious. But neither delivers the concentrated fat and protein that fish and shellfish provide. A single productive fishing trip could supply more usable energy than days of foraging on land.
Over generations, this dietary shift left marks on the human body. As softer, cooked aquatic foods became regular parts of the diet, human jaws gradually became less robust while skull capacity increased. The two changes track each other in the fossil record — a trade-off that helped produce the physical form we recognize as anatomically modern Homo sapiens.
From river to village to open ocean
A reliable food source in a fixed location changed how humans organized themselves. Land-based hunting typically requires following animals across wide ranges, which limits how large a group can stay together and for how long. A productive river or reef offers food in the same spot year after year — making it practical to stay, build, and accumulate.
In the Pacific Northwest, ancient cultures built massive storehouses for dried and smoked salmon. In coastal Japan, communities organized social calendars around seasonal fish runs thousands of years before written records began. Along the West African coast, fishing traditions established millennia ago persist in modified form today — and efforts like the Ghana marine protected area at Cape Three Points now work to safeguard the same waters those traditions depend on.
Surplus food made something else possible: time. When winter calories were already stacked in the storehouse, people could make art, develop governance, and pass knowledge across generations. Those possibilities have deep roots in a bone harpoon buried in the mud of an African riverbed.
As fishing cultures grew more confident on water, they built better boats and ranged farther from shore. Maritime exploration connected distant island communities, spread technologies across oceans, and laid the groundwork for early contact between peoples. The same impulse that sent someone wading into the Semliki River with a barbed bone eventually sent Polynesian navigators across the open Pacific.
Lasting impact
The bone harpoons at Katanda did not just add a food source. They restructured the relationship between people and place, between body and brain, and between small family bands and the larger world beyond the horizon.
The nutritional gains likely contributed to the cognitive expansion that distinguishes Homo sapiens from earlier relatives. The social stability that came with reliable aquatic food helped produce the first permanent settlements — which in turn made writing, agriculture, and organized governance possible. The boat-building skills developed to reach better fishing grounds became the vessels of exploration, migration, and contact between peoples.
The site at Katanda also coincides with the traditional range of the Efépeople, a Pygmy group whose mitochondrial DNA analysis has identified as carrying one of the most ancient and genetically distinct lineages among living humans. That connection is not incidental — it is a reminder that the people who developed these tools were not abstractions. They had descendants. Some of those descendants are still here.
Blindspots and limits
The Katanda site tells us that sophisticated fishing tools existed 90,000 years ago, but it cannot tell us how widely this knowledge spread or how many other communities developed similar technologies independently and left no durable trace. Bone survives only under specific conditions, and the vast majority of early human sites — especially in tropical and coastal environments — have been lost to decomposition, rising sea levels, and erosion.
When the harpoons were first dated in the late 1980s, many archaeologists doubted the results, believing the tools were too advanced for that period. That skepticism has since been overturned by multiple independent confirmations, but it is a useful reminder that the archaeological record is always incomplete — and that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Semliki harpoon
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana creates a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Uganda reintroduces rhinos to Kidepo Valley
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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