[Epistemic status: channeling my physical anthropology professor.]
If you ever do it, please make sure not to leave any (wannabe) stone tools or stone tool fragments in the “wild”, lest you excite some amateur (or non-amateur) human origin enthusiast who takes them as possibly true artifacts of prehistoric hominids and wastes their time trying to do something scientifically virtuous with them.
If you ever do it, please be sure to try to confuse archaeologists as much as possible. Find some cave, leave all your flint tools there, and carve images of space aliens onto the wall.
[Epistemic status: channeling my physical anthropology professor.]
If you ever do it, please make sure not to leave any (wannabe) stone tools or stone tool fragments in the “wild”, lest you excite some amateur (or non-amateur) human origin enthusiast who takes them as possibly true artifacts of prehistoric hominids and wastes their time trying to do something scientifically virtuous with them.
If you ever do it, please be sure to try to confuse archaeologists as much as possible. Find some cave, leave all your flint tools there, and carve images of space aliens onto the wall.
Do some crop circles too, while you’re at it.