Archaeologists have discovered what may be the earliest evidence of deliberate fire-making.
Evidence uncovered in a field in Suffolk, England indicates that ancient humans intentionally harnessed fire more than ...
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'It is the most exciting discovery in my 40-year career': Archaeologists uncover evidence that Neanderthals made fire 400,000 years ago in England
Archaeologists have found the earliest evidence yet of fire technology — and it was created by Neanderthals in England more ...
The oldest evidence for human ancestors using fire, dating back to between 1 million and 1.5 million years ago, comes from a ...
Archaeological evidence makes a compelling case for Neanderthal-created fires 400,000 years ago in Suffolk, UK — plus, how ...
A study shows Neanderthals made first fire in Britain 400,000 years ago, pushing back the timeline of controlled fire use by ...
Evidence from a site in southeast England suggests early humans were purposefully and repeatedly igniting blazes roughly ...
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Earliest evidence of Neanderthal fire-making found in Suffolk
Is it the case that control of fire by Neanderthals was mastered 350,000 years before the previously believed date? Evidence ...
Something about a warm, flickering campfire draws in modern humans ...
According to groundbreaking findings from England, Neanderthals were sparking their own fires 400,000 years ago — hundreds of thousands of years earlier than many anthropologists previously believed.
Archaeologists in Britain say they have found the earliest known evidence of deliberate fire-making, dating to around 400,000 ...
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