Determining
exactly when humans began wearing clothes is a challenge, largely because early
clothes would have been things like animal hides, which degrade rapidly.
Therefore, there’s very little archaeological evidence that can be used to
determine the date that clothing started being worn.
There
have been several different theories based on what archaeologists have been
able to find. For instance, based on genetic skin-coloration research, humans
lost body hair around one million years ago—an ideal time to start wearing
clothes for warmth. The first tools used to
READ MORE--->>>
scrape hides date back to 780,000
years ago, but animal hides served other uses, such as providing shelter, and
it’s thought that those tools were used to prepare hides for that, rather than
clothing. Eyed needles started appearing around 40,000 years ago, but those
tools point to more complex clothing, meaning clothes had probably already been
around for a while.READ MORE--->>>
All
that being said, scientists have started gathering alternative data that might
help solve the mystery of when we humans started covering our bits.
A
recent University of Florida study concluded that humans started wearing
clothes some 170,000 years ago, lining up with the end of the second-to-last
ice age. How did they figure that date out? By studying the evolution of lice.
Scientists
observed that clothing lice are, well, extremely well-adapted to clothing. They
hypothesized that body lice must have evolved to live in clothing, which meant
that they weren’t around before humans started wearing clothes. The study used
DNA sequencing of lice to calculate when clothing lice started to genetically
split from head lice.
The
findings of the study are significant because they show that clothes appeared
some 70,000 years before humans started to migrate north from Africa into
cooler climates. The invention of clothing was probably one factor that made
migration possible.
This
timing also makes sense due to known climate factors in that era. As Ian
Gilligan, a lecturer at the Australian National University, said that the study
gave “an unexpectedly early date for clothing, much earlier than the earliest
solid archaeological evidence, but it makes sense. It means modern humans
probably started wearing clothes on a regular basis to keep warm when they were
first exposed to Ice Age conditions.”
As
to when humans moved on from animal hides and into textiles, the first fabric
is thought to have been an early ancestor of felt. From there, early humans
took up weaving some 27,000 years ago, based on impressions of baskets and
textiles on clay. Around 25,000 years ago, the first Venus figurines—little
statues of women—appeared wearing a variety of different clothes that pointed
to weaving technology being in place by this time.
From
there, more recent ancient civilizations discovered many materials they could
fashion into clothing. For instance, Ancient Egyptians produced linen around
5500 BC, while the Chinese likely started producing silk around 4000 B.C.
As
for clothing for fashion, instead of just keeping warm, it is thought that this
occurred relatively early on. The first example of dyed flax fibers were found
in a cave in the Republic of Georgia and date back to 36,000 years ago. That
being said, while they may have added colour, early clothes seem to have been
much simpler than the clothing we wear today—mostly cloth draped over the
shoulder and pinned at the waist.
Around
the mid-1300s in certain regions of the world, with some technological advances
in previous century, clothing fashion began to change drastically from what it
was before. For instance, clothing started to be made to form fit the human
body, with curved seams, laces, and buttons. Contrasting colours and fabrics
also became popular in England. From this time, fashion in the West began to
change at an alarming rate, largely based on aesthetics, whereas in other
cultures fashion typically changed only with great political upheaval, meaning
changes came more slowly in most other cultures.
The
Industrial Revolution, of course, had a huge impact on the clothing industry.
Clothes could now be made en mass in factories rather than just in the home and
could be transported from factory to market in record time. As a result,
clothes became drastically cheaper, leading to people having significantly
larger wardrobes and contributing to the constant change in fashion that we
still see today.
This Post Collect From : gizmodo.com/when-did-humans-start-wearing-clothes-1299154403
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