4.8 Article

Fire As an Engineering Tool of Early Modern Humans

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 325, Issue 5942, Pages 859-862

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1175028

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF (USA) [BCS-9912465, BCS-0130713, BCS-0524087]
  2. Hyde Family Trust
  3. Institute for Human Origins, ASU
  4. University of Liverpool Geomagnetism Laboratory
  5. Faculty of Medicine at UNSW
  6. Australian Research Council [DP0877603]
  7. Marie Curie International
  8. [PIOF-GA-2008-21994]

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The controlled use of fire was a breakthrough adaptation in human evolution. It first provided heat and light and later allowed the physical properties of materials to be manipulated for the production of ceramics and metals. The analysis of tools at multiple sites shows that the source stone materials were systematically manipulated with fire to improve their flaking properties. Heat treatment predominates among silcrete tools at similar to 72 thousand years ago (ka) and appears as early as 164 ka at Pinnacle Point, on the south coast of South Africa. Heat treatment demands a sophisticated knowledge of fire and an elevated cognitive ability and appears at roughly the same time as widespread evidence for symbolic behavior.

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