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Groundbreaking discovery shows humans were making fire 350,000 years . . . Research published in Nature provides evidence of the earliest known instance of fire making by humans – around 400,000 years ago The ability to make fire is a critical turning point in human evolution – it increased survival in harsher environments, coincided with the enlargement of the brain
Archaeologists Find Oldest Evidence of Fire-Making Neanderthals 400,000 years ago were striking flints to make fires, researchers have found An artist’s conception of a fire in Barnham, southeast England, 400,000 years ago
This could be the oldest evidence of fire-making Taken together, the finds suggest that an early group of Neanderthals deliberately and repeatedly set fires in a hearth there roughly 400,000 years ago
Archaeologists find earliest known fire made by humans A field in eastern England has revealed evidence of the earliest known instance of humans creating and controlling fire, a significant find that archaeologists say illuminates a dramatic turning