Going from hunter&getherer to agriaculture was an evolution in the cultural development of humans. Not evolution of the species through genes.
It's like saying that before humans could travel to the moon they weren't human because they didn't use 'tools'.
I already provided some hints about tools. Homo habilis fossils are almost always found with tools.
In Olduvai Gorge the oldest H. habilis is 2.5 million years. But the oldest fossil is only 2 million years.
We have even classified stone age tools in different groups. One is called the Olduwan:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OlduwanThe Afar Triangle, where a new sepcies of hominid has been found in march this year:
https://www.stoneageinstitute.org/news/gawis_hominid.shtml...is the place where the oldes human tools have been found. Dated 2.6 million years ago.
Then we have Acheulean
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AcheuleanThese were used by the transitional Homo sapiens idaltu, Homo heidelbergensis, a still unclassified proto-Neanderthal species, Homo ergaster and Homo erectus.
Fire is also part of this technological development. The earliest species to have used fire is probably H. egaster. But evidence is still weak. But since these species also lived in the much colded euroasia it seems to be a requirement to have had fire.
Acheulean is dated from 1.8 million years to 100,000 years ago.
The oldest agriculture is found in Israel, yes 'biblical lands', site of Ohalo II dated 20,000 BCE.
There is also evidence for early agriculture at Abu Hureyra in Syria. Yes, the enemies of the Israelites. It's dated older than 10,000 BCE.
Also, the fact that there is no older evidence doesn't mean that humans didn't practice agriculture earlier. But surely it wasn't practiced 100,000 years ago.
Agriculture really took off in the Fertile Crescent of Mesopotamia in 8000 BCE. The Sumerians, who developed the myths which the bible significantly plagiarized.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_agriculture#Ancient_agricultureThe oldest pottery is quite suprisingly found in northern Japan, 10,500 BCE by the Jomen people.
People independently developed pottery in North Africa, also 10th millenium BCE, but a little later and in South America 7th millenium BCE.