Interesting Engineering on MSN
400,0000-year-old evidence of earliest fire-making rewrites human history
Archaeologists have unearthed evidence of the earliest fire-making, dating back 400,000 years, in Suffolk, England. The ...
A new archaeological find pushes back the timeline on when humans mastered the ability to make fires, a transformative ...
From an incredible series of revelations about the ancient humans called Denisovans to surprising discoveries about tool ...
Study Finds on MSN
Ethiopian Homo erectus skull discovery rewrites human evolution timeline
What did researchers find? A 1.6-to-1.5-million-year-old skull from Ethiopia combines features from two different stages of ...
Researchers say they found 400,000-year-old evidence of a hearth and tools at what used to be pond site where Neanderthals ...
Scientists have discovered the oldest-known evidence of fire-making by prehistoric humans in the English county of Suffolk - ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Over 400,000-Year-Old Evidence of Fire-Making Unearthed — Thousands of Years Earlier Than Once Thought
Learn more about the creation of fire, and how new artifacts show that fire was used tens of thousands of years earlier than ...
The find, at a disused clay pit in Suffolk, suggests humans were making fire 350,000 years earlier than previously known. | ...
Fifty years ago, a remarkable fossil was unearthed in the Afar Rift Valley of Ethiopia, forever transforming our understanding of human evolution. Uncovered by a young paleoanthropologist, Donald ...
Discovery of iron pyrite at a site in England pushes back the date of human fire creation by 350,000 years Early humans may ...
Ancient, fossilized teeth, uncovered during a decades-long archaeology project in northeastern Ethiopia, indicate that two different kinds of hominins, or human ancestors, lived in the same place ...
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