The discovery at Barnham, a site in Suffolk, England, has shed new light on the earliest evidence of humans starting fires. Archaeologists have found evidence that Neanderthals used fire for cooking and warmth around 400,000 years ago. The discovery consists of heat-reddened clay, fire-cracked stone, and fragments of pyrite - a mineral not naturally found nearby but very handy for striking sparks with flint.
The site was once an abandoned English clay pit where workers first discovered stone tools in the early 1900s. However, around 400,000 years ago, it would have been a picturesque little spot at the edge of a stream-fed pond surrounded by a mix of forest and grassland. The Neanderthals that lived there likely used fire for both practical and social purposes.
The key evidence for this comes from the presence of pyrite fragments in the sediment around the hearth, which is unlikely to have been caused by wildfires in the area at that time. Archaeologists also found evidence of flint tools being shattered by heat, alongside a scattering of other heat-cracked flint flakes. This suggests that the Neanderthals were actively creating fire.
The discovery has pushed back our understanding of when humans first started using fire to around 400,000 years ago. While it is possible that Homo sapiens in Africa had the ability to make fire before this time, more evidence is needed to confirm this.
To reconstruct what a Neanderthal campfire might have looked like, archaeologists used experiments to compare the baked clay from Barnham to clay taken from near the site. The results suggested that the hearth at Barnham was likely created by heating the clay for 12 or more events, each lasting around four hours at temperatures of up to 600 degrees Celsius.
This discovery highlights the importance of fire in human history and has significant implications for our understanding of how our ancestors lived and interacted with their environment.
The site was once an abandoned English clay pit where workers first discovered stone tools in the early 1900s. However, around 400,000 years ago, it would have been a picturesque little spot at the edge of a stream-fed pond surrounded by a mix of forest and grassland. The Neanderthals that lived there likely used fire for both practical and social purposes.
The key evidence for this comes from the presence of pyrite fragments in the sediment around the hearth, which is unlikely to have been caused by wildfires in the area at that time. Archaeologists also found evidence of flint tools being shattered by heat, alongside a scattering of other heat-cracked flint flakes. This suggests that the Neanderthals were actively creating fire.
The discovery has pushed back our understanding of when humans first started using fire to around 400,000 years ago. While it is possible that Homo sapiens in Africa had the ability to make fire before this time, more evidence is needed to confirm this.
To reconstruct what a Neanderthal campfire might have looked like, archaeologists used experiments to compare the baked clay from Barnham to clay taken from near the site. The results suggested that the hearth at Barnham was likely created by heating the clay for 12 or more events, each lasting around four hours at temperatures of up to 600 degrees Celsius.
This discovery highlights the importance of fire in human history and has significant implications for our understanding of how our ancestors lived and interacted with their environment.