The latest discovery, about the size of a thumbnail, was made byArchaeologists ofAustralian National University (ANU) in Western Australia's remote Kimberley region.
ANU'sarcheologist Sue O'Connor said the axe dates back between 46,000 and 49,000 years, around the time people first arrived on the continent.
"This is the earliest evidence of hafted axes in the world. Nowhere else in the world do you get axes at this date," O'Connor from the university'sSchool of Culture, History and Language, said.
O'Connor said this discovery showed early Aboriginal technology was not as simple as has been previously suggested.
A hafted axe is an axe with a handle attached.
"Australian stone artefacts have often been characterised as being simple. But clearly that's not the case when you have these hafted axes earlier in Australia than anywhere else in the world," she said.
O'Connor said evidence suggests the technology was developed in Australia after people arrived around 50,000 years ago.
Once unearthed, the flakes were then analysed by Peter Hiscock from the University of Sydney.
"Since there are no known axes in Southeast Asia during the Ice Age, this discovery shows us that when humans arrived in Australia they began to experiment with new technologies, inventing ways to exploit the resources they encountered," Hiscock said adding 'The question of when axes were invented has been pursued for decades.
Hesaid although humans spread across Australia, axe technology did not spread with them.
The axe fragment was initially excavated in the early 1990s by Professor O'Connor at Carpenter's Gap 1, a large rock shelter in Windjana Gorge National Park in the Kimberley region of Western Australia.
New studies of the fragment have made it public that it comes from an axe made of basalt that had been shaped and polished by grinding it against a softer rock like sandstone.
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