When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Control of fire by early humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Control_of_fire_by_early_humans

    The control of fire by early humans was a critical technology enabling the evolution of humans. Fire provided a source of warmth and lighting, protection from predators (especially at night), a way to create more advanced hunting tools, and a method for cooking food. These cultural advances allowed human geographic dispersal, cultural ...

  3. Native American use of fire in ecosystems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_use_of...

    Fire regimes of United States plants. Savannas have regimes of a few years: blue, pink, and light green areas. When first encountered by Europeans, many ecosystems were the result of repeated fires every one to three years, resulting in the replacement of forests with grassland or savanna, or opening up the forest by removing undergrowth. [23]

  4. Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catching_Fire:_How_Cooking...

    Wrangham also argues that cooking and control of fire generally affected species development by providing warmth and helping to fend off predators, which helped human ancestors adapt to a ground-based lifestyle. Wrangham points out that humans are highly evolved for eating cooked food and cannot maintain reproductive fitness with raw food. [3]

  5. Controlled burn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled_burn

    Human beings are also inexorably tied to the land they live on as stewards who maintain the ecosystems around them. Because fire can reveal dormant seedlings, it is a land management tool. Fire was a part of the landscapes of Ontario until early colonial rule restricted indigenous culture in across Canada. [59]

  6. Fire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire

    Khoisan starting a fire in Namibia. The ability to control fire was a dramatic change in the habits of early humans. [15] Making fire to generate heat and light made it possible for people to cook food, simultaneously increasing the variety and availability of nutrients and reducing disease by killing pathogenic microorganisms in the food. [16]

  7. Quest for Fire (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quest_for_Fire_(film)

    The Canadian-French co-production is a film adaptation of the 1911 Belgian novel The Quest for Fire by J.-H. Rosny. The story is set "80,000 years ago", with a plot concerning the struggle for control of fire by early humans. The film was critically acclaimed.

  8. This simple log structure may be the oldest example of early ...

    www.aol.com/news/simple-log-structure-may-oldest...

    Researchers have uncovered a simple structure from the Stone Age that may be the oldest evidence yet of early humans building with wood. It's nearly half a million years old and provides a rare ...

  9. Timeline of human evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_human_evolution

    H. erectus is the first known species to develop control of fire, by about 1.5 Ma. H. erectus later migrates throughout Eurasia, reaching Southeast Asia by 0.7 Ma. It is described in a number of subspecies. [38] Early humans were social and initially scavenged, before becoming active hunters.