Earliest Evidence of Human Fire-Making Discovered in England
Researchers identified a repeatedly used hearth with fire-cracked tools and rare iron pyrite, pushing back controlled fire-making evidence by 350,000 years, aiding human evolution.
- Published on December 10, the British Museum-led study in Nature reports fire-making evidence at Barnham, Suffolk over 400,000 years ago, pushing the timeline back 350,000 years.
- Researchers have long debated whether early hominins made fire or captured wildfires, complicating interpretation amid sparse, ambiguous evidence despite traces as early as 1.5 million years and Neanderthal claims around 40,000 years ago.
- At Barnham, excavators uncovered heated clay, heat-shattered flint handaxes, and two fragments of iron pyrite, while laboratory analyses show repeated heating above 700°C and pyrite transport.
- Study authors say intentional fire-making enabled cooking, improving nutrition and brain growth, but no hominin remains were found, so early Neanderthals or Homo heidelbergensis are plausible candidates.
- Some reviewers noted the lack of direct spark scars on pyrite and flint, while independent archaeologists called the evidence compelling amid rising European Paleolithic fire use around 400,000 years ago.
131 Articles
131 Articles
By Katie Hunt. A team of archaeologists has unearthed the oldest and most conclusive evidence of the earliest known instance of humans creating and controlling fire in a field in eastern England. This significant find, experts say, marks a dramatic turning point in human evolution. In Barnham, Suffolk, the discovery of baked clay hearths, heat-broken flint axes, and two fragments of pyrite—a type of stone used to create sparks for lighting a lig…
It was much earlier than the previous discoveries suggested. Scientists announced this Wednesday that they had discovered evidence of man's ability to make fire 400,000 years before our Common Era in the United Kingdom.Man's ability to make fire is one of the turning points in the history of humanity, allowing not only our ancestors to warm up, but also to socialize and cook food, and thus the evolution of our brains.There are signs of the use o…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 44% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

























