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    Home » Oldest evidence of fire-lighting comes from early humans in Britain

    Oldest evidence of fire-lighting comes from early humans in Britain

    Team_NationalNewsBriefBy Team_NationalNewsBriefDecember 17, 2025 Science No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Artist’s impression of sparks from flint and pyrite

    Craig Williams, The Trustees of the British Museum

    Around 400,000 years ago, a band of Neanderthals, or their ancestors, in Britain struck flint with pyrite and built a fire repeatedly in the same spot. Archaeologists studying the site think it is the earliest evidence of humans starting fires ever found.

    Early humans may have been opportunistically using fire for around 1.5 million years. But it is likely that these hominins simply made use of fire that had been ignited in other ways, such as through lightning strikes.

    Evidence of more extensive use of fire increased in Europe from around 400,000 years ago. However, until now, we had only direct evidence that humans could control ignition from around 50,000 years ago.


    Nick Ashton at the British Museum in London says there are three crucial pieces of evidence from the site his team has studied at Barnham quarry in Suffolk: pyrite, heated sediment and heat-shattered handaxes.

    Pyrite is an extremely important mineral in the history of humans and fire, as it can be struck against flint to make sparks, which, in turn, can ignite kindling such as dry grass to make a fire. However, pyrite doesn’t occur naturally near the quarry site, so it must have been brought there by early humans. “Pyrite is certainly the clincher,” says Ashton.

    But the reddish layer of sediment left by the fire is almost as important, he says. Burning alters the iron minerals in the sediment and can therefore change their magnetism. Laboratory experiments showed that the reddish clay sediment may have experienced fire a dozen times – possible evidence that humans returned to the same spot and lit fires repeatedly.

    Heating flint can make it easier to shape into sharp tools, but overheating can cause the flint to shatter – as is the case with the handaxes found at Barnham. Tests showed they had reached temperatures of over 700°C, so Ashton suspects they were heated accidentally.

    Deliberate fire-making by humans in the UK may date to more than 400,000 years ago, according to evidence described in Nature this week. The discovery of baked sediments, heat-shattered flint axes and pieces of pyrite ? a stone used to create sparks for lighting tinder ? in a disused claypit in the east of England suggests that humans at this site were able to make and maintain fires. The findings predate previous evidence for the deliberate lighting of fires by around 350,000 years and indicate a shift in human behaviour that may have contributed to an increase in brain size and cognitive abilities. Excavation of 400,000 year old pond sediments at Barnham, Suffolk

    The excavation at a disused quarry in Barnham, UK

    Jordan Mansfield, Pathways to Ancient Britain Project.

    Ashton says there is increasing evidence that humans from half a million years ago were proficient across a range of cultural and technological skills, including fire-making.

    “Early Neanderthals, and no doubt other contemporary human species, were far more capable than we’ve often given them credit [for],” says Ashton. “Making fire is not easy and requires knowledge about the sources of pyrite, its properties when struck against flint and the right tinder to use to transform sparks into flames.”

    John Gowlett at the University of Liverpool in the UK says, based on the new discoveries, it is “very credible” that people 400,000 years ago were routinely using fire and even making it.

    “Early humans were certainly aware of fire, but finding burnt things together with tools doesn’t automatically show human fire control,” he says. “If you have repeated human occupations in a place, and repeated evidence of fire, that’s good evidence for human control – because natural fires don’t return often.”

    New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

    Human origins and gentle walking in prehistoric south-west England

    Immerse yourself in the early human periods of the Neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age on this gentle walking tour.

    Topics:

    • Neanderthals/
    • ancient humans



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