Tormod Posted August 14, 2009 Report Posted August 14, 2009 New evidence that early modern humans used fire in southern Africa in a controlled way to increase the quality and efficiency of stone tools is changing how researchers understand the evolution of human behavior, and in particular, the evolution of human brain power. Curtis Marean, a paleoanthropologist with the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, and an international team of researchers with members from South Africa, England, Australia and France found 72,000-year-old, silcrete rocks that had been fired and flaked to make stone tools in a cave along the coast of the southern tip of Africa in Mossel Bay. The finding indicates that humans' ability to solve complex problems may have occurred at the same time their modern genetic lineage appeared, rather than developing later as has been widely speculated. Watch a video featuring Curtis Marean discussing the findings:nsf.gov - News - Video - Curtis Marean talks about the discovery of fired and flaked stone tools in southern Africa. - US National Science Foundation (NSF) Source Quote
Michaelangelica Posted September 5, 2009 Report Posted September 5, 2009 Still some argument about when we started to use fireBut the rest seems to be accepted. Cooked food=better nutrition from less food=social and biological change.Light My Fire: Cooking As Key To Modern Human Evolution Quote
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