Thursday, December 18, 2014

Humans mastered fire 350,000 years ago

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Flint tools and debris found in Tabun Cave in Israel suggests that humans mastered fire 350,000 years ago.


In layers older than roughly 350,000 years, almost none of the flints are burned. But in every layer after that, many flints show signs of exposure to fire: red or black coloration, cracking, and small round depressions where fragments known as pot lids flaked off from the stone. Wildfires are rare in caves, so the fires that burned the Tabun flints were probably controlled by ancestral humans, according to the authors. The scientists argue that the jump in the frequency of burnt flints represents the time when ancestral humans learned to control fire, either by kindling it or by keeping it burning between natural wildfires.


[Full story]


Story: Nala Rogers, Science Magazine | Photo: Ron Shimelmitz



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