• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Humans In Europe Mastered Fire 50,000 Years Earlier Than We Previously Thought

August 19, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Fresh evidence suggests that early humans in Europe were mastering fire around 245,000 years ago. If this latest assessment is on point, it indicates our distant relatives may have been sat around a campfire, perhaps sharing food and building social bonds, up to 50,000 years earlier than previously thought.  

In a recent study, researchers studied samples from the Valdocarros II, a huge archaeological site found east of the Spanish capital of Madrid. Using forensic chemical analysis, they found certain compounds that clearly show things were burnt by fire. 

Advertisement

Furthermore, it appears these fires were not simply accidents or wildfires. The researchers highlight evidence that humans may have sat around the firepit like a campfire, strongly suggesting this was an “organized” event that perhaps played an important role in their social interaction. 

“We have found definitive evidence of things being burnt and those remains are organised into a pattern, suggesting it’s humans who are making and controlling the fire. Either they were using the fire to cook or to defend themselves. The spatial patterning in the fire tells us that they were encircling something, like a home or sleeping area, a living room or kitchen, or an enclosure for animals,” Dr. Clayton Magill, study author and Assistant Professor at Heriot-Watt University in Scotland, said in a statement. 

It is unclear which species of early humans might have crafted the fires, however. According to most estimates, modern Homo sapiens had not even arrived in Western Europe until around 50,000 years ago, indicating it was another species that built the campfire. After all, we know that Europe has also been inhabited by a host of other hominin relatives throughout its history, including Neanderthals and Homo erectus. 

Outside of Europe, there is even earlier evidence of humans playing with fire. The timing is still hotly debated, but there’s some evidence that Homo erectus was using controlled fires roughly 1.6 million years ago. 

Advertisement

Understanding this timeline is no trivial matter. By learning about how and when our distant ancestors started to control fire, we can deduce all kinds of things about nutrition, social behavior, cognitive abilities, and much more. 

Dr Magill added that this new work helps to fill in the gaps in our understanding of human-controlled fire and human development.

“This is important because our species is defined by our use of fire,” Dr Magill explained. “Being able to cook food to feed our big brains is one of the things that made us so successful in an evolutionary sense. Fire also brings protection and fosters communication and family connection. And we now have definitive, incontrovertible evidence that humans were starting and stopping fires in Europe about 50,000 years earlier than we suspected.”

The study is published in Scientific Reports.

Advertisement

An earlier version of this article was published in May 2023.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Gunmen kidnap 20 foreigners, likely from Haiti and Venezuela, from Mexico hotel
  2. ECB debate reflects growing inflation fears, Sept accounts show
  3. Man Hospitalized After Eating A Live Crab In Revenge For His Daughter
  4. Surprise! Adorable White Bison Calf Born In Bear River State Park

Source Link: Humans In Europe Mastered Fire 50,000 Years Earlier Than We Previously Thought

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Catch The Last Supermoon Of The Year This Week
  • Why Does It Feel Like You’re Dropping Around 30 Seconds After A Plane Takes Off?
  • We Finally Understand Why We “Feel” It When We See Someone Get Hurt
  • The First Map Of America: Juan De La Cosa’s Strange Map Was Missing Until 1832
  • What’s The Difference Between Buffalo And Bison?
  • 18,000-Year-Old Stalagmite Sheds Light On Why Civilization Started In The Fertile Crescent
  • Enormous Anaconda Fossils Reveal They Got Big 12 Million Years Ago – And Stayed Big
  • Meet The Malaysian Earthtiger Tarantula: Secretive And Stripy With A Leg Span For Days
  • Meet The Thresher Shark, A Goofy Predator That Whips Up Cavitation Bubbles To Stun Prey
  • 18 Asteroids Passed Earth Closer Than The Moon In November – All Of Them Were Discovered That Month
  • 7th Person Cured Of HIV After Stem Cell Donation Offers Hope Of Expanded Treatment Options
  • Humans Weren’t Capable Of “Mass Hunting” Until 50,000 Years Ago – What Changed?
  • ESA Steps Up Earth Monitoring, As NASA And NOAA Missions Face Uncertain Futures
  • Yellowstone’s Wolves And The Controversy Racking Ecologists Right Now
  • A New Universal Principle Behind Fragmentation Predicts Size Of Any Breakup Debris
  • Airbus Just Had To Ground 6,000 Of Its Airplanes – Was A Celestial Threat To Blame?
  • Meet Pumuckel, The World’s Shortest Living Horse (And Probably The Cutest Thing You’ll See This Week)
  • How A 500-Year-Old Inaccurate Bible Is Responsible For The Modern World
  • This Newly Discovered Blood Type Is So Rare, Only 3 People In The World Are Known To Have It
  • The Science Of Magic: Find Out More In Issue 41 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version