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Human
ancestors used fire a million years ago
Discovery pushes fire use
back hundreds of thousands of years to Homo erectus
Posted: Apr 2, 2012
2:59 PM ET
Last Updated: Apr 2,
2012 3:56 PM ET
The fire evidence was found with Homo erectus stone
tools in Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa. (M.
Chazan/University of Toronto)
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Scientists have uncovered the first archeological
evidence that Homo erectus, an ancestor of modern humans, used fire.
Traces of ash and burnt bone about a million years
old were discovered in Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa by an international team
led by researchers at the University of Toronto and Hebrew University, reported
a paper to be published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences. The study described the ability to control fire as "a crucial
turning point in human evolution."
"When we found this, I was very
surprised," said Michael Chazan, an archeologist at the University of
Toronto who co-led the project.
That's because there was previously very little
archeological evidence for the use of fire by humans or human ancestors more
than 400,000 years ago. That was about the time that modern humans and
Neanderthals arose.
Nevertheless, paleoanthropologists — scientists who
study the anatomy of human and pre-human fossils — had earlier suggested
that Homo erectus may have cooked its food, based on its size
and the size of its molar teeth.
The recent discovery "puts the theoretical and
archeological evidence a bit more in sync," Chazan said.
A fragment of burned bone appears in a slice of
sediment from the cave, viewed under a microscope. (P. Goldberg) The study used material —
including minerals and sediment mixed in with archeological artifacts - that
was excavated previously from Wonderwerk Cave. It was encased in plastic, and
then cut into thin slices for examination under the microscope.
The researchers discovered that it contained the
ash of plant matter such as grass, brush and leaves, but no big pieces of wood.
It also included burned bone fragments and stone tools that had been exposed to
fire.
The fact that the ash had a lot of angular edges
suggested that the burning had taken place inside the cave — if the ash had
blown in from outside, the edges would have been rounded and worn down by the
elements, Chazan said.
It was challenging to figure out how old the ash
was, he added, because radiocarbon dating doesn't work on material that old.
The researchers used a combination of two different
geological methods. The results were consistent with the type of stone tools
found with the ash, which were known to be made by Homo erectus.
Different use for fire?
Chazan said a lot of questions remain, such as
what Homo erectus was using the fire for. The evidence doesn't
prove that fire was used to cook meat. And it's very different and subtle
compared to more recent evidence of fire use by ancient humans, which typically
includes a large build-up of ash and charcoal, along with burnt stone tools.
"Could it be that what we're seeing is a
different way of using fire than in later periods?" Chazan asks.
The researchers hope to gain more information by
going back to the cave to do another excavation, so they can see where the
burned sediment is in relation to the stone tools. They are also running
experiments to see what type of evidence fires from grass and leaves would
leave behind on materials such as bones and stone tools.

2 comentarios:
es interesante como el homo erectus descubre el fuego y como es que desde hace millones de años el fuego sigue siendo tan importante para los humanos
El uso del fuego por los antepasados humanos fue un factor que ayudo a su evolución, ya que el fuego pudo haber sido utilizado para la creación o mejoramiento de herramientas la cuales pudieron ser usados como elementos para la caza y la protección de su grupo, así mismo el uso del fuego dentro de las cuevas servia como protección ante depredadores el cual fue un factor que ayudó a la evolución de la especie.
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