The discovery site at East Farm, Barnham, England lies hidden within a disused clay pit tucked away in the wooded landscape between Thetford and Bury St Edmunds. Professor Nick Ashton from the British ...
Archaeologists in Britain say they've found the earliest evidence of humans making fires anywhere in the world. The discovery ...
An international research team led by the British Museum has unearthed in a field in Suffolk the oldest known material ...
"We think humans brought pyrite to the site with the intention of making fire. And this has huge implications, pushing back ...
A 400,000-year-old hearth in an English clay pit suggests our distant cousins were making and tending fire far earlier than ...
Painstaking analysis of discoveries at a prehistoric site in Suffolk shows humans started making fire hundreds of thousands ...
Researchers excavating an ancient Neanderthal site in southern England found evidence not just of a hearth, but of its ...
Researchers say they’ve uncovered new evidence in present-day England that could reshape our understanding of human evolution ...
Scientists have uncovered the oldest-known evidence of deliberate fire-making by prehistoric humans in Suffolk, Britain – ...
Sundaland was a vast Southeast Asian landmass that existed for most of the last 2 million years, exposed during glacial ...
More than a decade after the first Neanderthal genome was sequenced, scientists are still working to understand how ...
A team of researchers led by the British Museum has unearthed the oldest known evidence of fire-making, dating back more than ...