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- How did prehistoric humans discover fire making? - ZME Science
Before 1 million years ago, sparse evidence from some African sites could suggest that hominins were opportunistically harvesting fire from naturally kindled blazes; rather than practicing
- The Dawn of Fire: When Did Early Humans First Discover Fire?
When Was Fire First Discovered? Still, we do know that our evolutionary kin were exposed to fire — or at least aware of it — about two million years ago, well before the arrival of modern humans, says John Gowlett, an archeologist who specializes in human fire at the University of Liverpool
- Control of fire by early humans - Wikipedia
Evidence for the "microscopic traces of wood ash" as controlled use of fire by Homo erectus, beginning roughly 1 million years ago, has wide scholarly support [2][3] Some of the earliest known traces of controlled fire were found at the Daughters of Jacob Bridge, Israel, and dated to ~790,000 years ago [4][5] At the site, archaeologists also f
- The Discovery of Fire in the Early Stone Age - ThoughtCo
The controlled use of fire was likely an invention of our ancestor Homo erectus during the Early Stone Age (or Lower Paleolithic) The earliest evidence of fire associated with humans comes from Oldowan hominid sites in the Lake Turkana region of Kenya
- The discovery of fire by humans: a long and convoluted process
Rather than apes who came down from the trees, as traditionally seen, our ancestors were the bush country apes, and as such, through the last 3 Myr especially, some of them became exposed to more open habitats where natural fire was much more prevalent and obvious
- When Did We Discover Fire? Heres What Experts . . . - TIME
Our evidence of fire in the fossil record (in deep time, as we often refer to the long geological stretch of time before humans) is based mainly on the occurrence of charcoal This is the
- When did human ancestors discover fire? - Science
Fire leaves its mark, and archaeological evidence suggests that humans were starting fires (and probably cooking more) as early as 800,000 years ago ; some archaeologists believe that hearths may have been around even earlier, as far back as 1 5 million years ago
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