Abalone shell-you can see some of the ochre rich deposit. Image: Science/AAAS

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Karen van Niekerk removes the abalone containing the ochre grinder and ochre from the 100,000 year-old layers at Blombos Cave in South Africa. Image courtesy of Grethe Moell Pedersen

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Blombos Cave entrance from Indian ocean coast. Image courtesy of Magnus Haaland

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Blombos Cave interior panorama view. Image courtesy of Magnus Haaland

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Archaeologists work inside the Blombos Cave in South Africa in 2008 when they discovered the100,000 year old toolkits. Christopher Henshilwood on right, Grethe Pedersen in foreground. Image: Science/AAAS

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Entrance to Blombos Cave. Image courtesy of Magnus Haaland

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Lead author Christopher Henshilwood excavates the 100,000 year-old levels at Blombos Cave. Image: Science/AAAS

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Karen van Niekerk excavates the toolkit with abalone shell in the 100,000 year-old levels at Blombos Cave in 2008. Image: Science/AAAS

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The nacre and inside of the abalone shell after removal of the grindstone. The red deposit is the ochre rich mixture that was in the shell and preserved under a cobble grinder. Image courtesy of Grethe Moell Pedersen

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The toolkit with abalone shell before excavation from the 100,000 year-old Middle Stone Age levels at Blombos Cave in South Africa. Image: Science/AAAS

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Abalone shell-you can see some of the ochre rich deposit. Image: Science/AAAS

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Karen van Niekerk and Grethe Moell Pedersen point to the 100,000-year-old abalone shell with ochre before recovery in 2008. Image courtesy of Christopher Henshilwood