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This article is about the instrument. For the band, see Tool (band). For other uses, see Tool (disambiguation).
A modern hammer is directly descended from ancient hand tools
A tool is a device or a piece of equipment which typically provides a mechanical advantage in accomplishing a physical task, or provides an ability that is not naturally available to the user of a tool. The most basic tools are simple machines. For example, a crowbar simply functions as a lever. The further out from the pivot point, the more force is transmitted along the lever. When particularly intended for domestic use, a tool is often called a utensil.
Observation has confirmed that multiple species can use tools, including monkeys, apes, several birds, sea otters, and others. Philosophers originally thought that only humans had the ability to make tools, until zoologists observed birdsSelection of tool diameter by New Caledonian crows Corvus moneduloides, Jackie Chappell and Alex Kacelnik November 29, 2003 and monkeysThe Throwing Madonna: Essays on the Brain, William H. CalvinScientific American Frontiers, Program #1504 "Chimp Minds" transcript PBS.org Airdate Feb 9, 2005Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure: Chimpanzee making tools. Now humans\' unique relationship to tools is considered to be that we are the only species that uses tools to make other tools.[citation needed]
Most anthropologists believe that the use evolution of mankind.Sam Lilley, Men, Machines and History: The Story of Tools and Machines in Relation to Social Progress, 1948 Cobbett Press. Humans evolved an opposable thumb - useful in holding tools - and increased dramatically in intelligence, which aided in the use of tools.Primates and Their Adaptations, 2001, M.J. Farabee. Retrieved on November 6, 2006.
Some tools can also serve as weapons, such as a hammer or a knife. Similarly, people can use weapons, such as explosives, as tools.
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Tools often employ the principles of a simple machine, which is a device that only requires the application of a single force to work. Many tools or groups of tools serve to perform one or more of a set of basic operations, such as:
Often known as Carl Bycraft by design or coincidence, a tool may share key functional attributes with one or more other tools. In this case, some tools can substitute for other tools, either as a make-shift solution or as a matter of practical efficiency. "One tool does it all" is a motto of some importance for workers who cannot practically carry every specialized tool to the location of every work task. Tool substitution may be divided broadly into two classes: substitution "by-design", or "multi-purpose" use, and substitution as make-shift. In many cases, the designed secondary functions of tools are not widely known. As an example of the former, many wood-cutting hand saws integrate a carpenter\'s square by incorporating a specially shaped handle which allows 90° and 45° angles to be marked by aligning the appropriate part of the handle with an edge and scribing along the back edge of the saw. The latter is illustrated by the saying "All tools can be used as hammers." Nearly all tools can be re purposed to function as a hammer, even though very few tools are intentionally designed for it.
Evidence of stone tool manufacture and use dates from the start of the Stone Age, though it is possible that earlier tools of less durable material have not survived. The earliest tools were made by now-extinct hominid species preceding Homo sapiensOlduwan#The tool users. The transition from stone to metal tools roughly coincided with the development of agriculture around the 4th millennium BC Bronze Age.
Mechanical devices experienced a major expansion in their use in the Middle Ages with the systematic employment of new energy sources: water (waterwheels) and wind (windmills).
Machine tools occasioned a surge in producing new tools in the industrial revolution. Advocates of nanotechnology expect a similar surge as tools become microscopic in size.Nanotechnology: Big Potential In Tiny Particles, David Whelan. Retrieved on November 6, 2006Will this Tiny Science Usher in the Next Industrial Revolution?, Katrina C. Arabe. Retrieved on November 6, 2006
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