Scientists in Britain say ancient humans may have learned to make fire far earlier than previously believed, after uncovering evidence that deliberate fire-setting took place in what is now eastern ...
The earliest evidence of deliberate fire-making by humans was discovered at 400,000-year-old site in Barnham, England, ...
Earliest evidence of human fire-making found at 400,000-year-old Suffolk site. Researchers led by the British Museum have uncovered what they believe is the earliest known evidence of humans making ...
Scientists have discovered the oldest-known evidence of fire-making by prehistoric humans in the English county of Suffolk - a hearth apparently made by Neanderthals about 415,000 years ago - ...
Archaeologists in Britain say they've found the earliest evidence of humans making fires anywhere in the world. The discovery ...
Is it the case that control of fire by Neanderthals was mastered 350,000 years before the previously believed date? Evidence ...
Evidence from a site in southeast England suggests early humans were purposefully and repeatedly igniting blazes roughly ...
Four hundred thousand years ago, near a water hole on grasslands bordering a forest in what is now southern England, a group of Neandertals struck chunks of iron pyrite against flint to create sparks, ...