Humans Learned to Light the Fire 400,000 Years Ago, According to Study
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Why do we tremble when we see a wound in the movies?What happens in your mouth and teeth you barely consume sugar (and how to minimize the damage it causes)British Museum researchers discovered evidence of man's ability to deliberately light fire 400,000 years ago, much earlier than was thought, was announced on Wednesday.MIRA: The brain has 5 stages of development throughout life, determines studyHuman ability to make fire is one of the crucial…
Scientists discovered in the English county of Suffolk the oldest known proof that prehistoric humans made fire, a home apparently manufactured by Neanderthals about 415 thousand years ago, which reveals that this milestone of our evolutionary lineage occurred much earlier than was known. In an ancient clay pit to make bricks near the village of Barnham, the researchers found a hot mud stain, heat-torn axes of silex hand and two pieces of iron p…
Archaeologists have discovered the oldest evidence of deliberate fire-making by Neanderthals in Barnham, England. It dates back 400,000 years. The groundbreaking find pushes back our knowledge by 350,000 years and suggests that early humans acquired the ability to control fire much earlier than previously thought.
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