The Department of Media Relations - The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
 
Search:  
Advanced Search   Gallery  
About Us  
Contact Us   ňářéú
Latest Releases:   Press Releases:
Hebrew U. Researcher Creates 'Boutique' Fish Farms for Ugandans to Combat Lake Victoria's Depleted Fish SuppliesHebrew U. Researcher Creates 'Boutique' Fish Farms for Ugandans to Combat Lake Victoria's Depleted Fish Supplies
German Education Minister to Inaugurate New Buber Society of FellowsGerman Education Minister to Inaugurate New Buber Society of Fellows
Exhibition of the Hebrew University’s Institute of Archaeology in the Milwaukee Public Museum, USAExhibition of the Hebrew University’s Institute of Archaeology in the Milwaukee Public Museum, USA
All Aboard for Lecture on Breakthrough Brain ScienceAll Aboard for Lecture on Breakthrough Brain Science
2010 Scopus Award Gala Honoring Acclaimed Architect Frank O. Gehry2010 Scopus Award Gala Honoring Acclaimed Architect Frank O. Gehry
Prof. Yuval Shany to Receive President's Prize for Outstanding ResearcherProf. Yuval Shany to Receive President's Prize for Outstanding Researcher
Hebrew University Tied with Oxford University in Number of New European Research Council Grants Awarded in Past Two YearsHebrew University Tied with Oxford University in Number of New European Research Council Grants Awarded in Past Two Years
What Really Happened? Myth, Legend and Historical RealityWhat Really Happened? Myth, Legend and Historical Reality
Discussion on OECD Israel economic reportDiscussion on OECD Israel economic report
Why do People ‘Play the Longshot’ and Buy Insurance? It’s in Our Genes, Say Hebrew University, Singapore and Chinese researchersWhy do People ‘Play the Longshot’ and Buy Insurance? It’s in Our Genes, Say Hebrew University, Singapore and Chinese researchers
 
27 October, 2008

Fire out of Africa: a key to the migration of prehistoric man, says Hebrew University archaeological researcher

Excavations at the Gesher Benot Ya’qov site. (Photo: Prof. Naama Goren-Inbar)
Excavations at the Gesher Benot Ya’qov site. (Photo: Prof. Naama Goren-Inbar)

The ability to make fire millennia ago was likely a key factor in the migration of prehistoric hominids from Africa into Eurasia, a researcher at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Institute of Archaeology believes on the basis of findings at the Gesher Benot Ya’aqov archaeological site in Israel.

Earlier excavations there, carried out under the direction of Prof. Naama Goren-Inbar of the Institute of Archaeology, showed that the occupants of the site – who are identified as being part of the Acheulian culture that arose in Africa about 1.6 million years ago -- had mastered fire-making ability as long as 790,000 years ago. This revelation pushed back previously accepted dates for man’s fire-making ability by a half-million years.

The Gesher Benot Ya’aqov site is located along the Dead Sea rift in the Hula Valley of northern Israel.

Dr. Nira Alperson-Afil, a member of Goren-Inbar’s team, said that further, detailed investigation of burned flint at designated areas in all eight levels of civilization found at the site now shows that “concentrations of burned flint items were found in distinct areas, interpreted as representing the remnants of ancient hearths.” This tells us, she said, that once acquired, this fire-making ability was carried on over a period of many generations. Alperson-Afil’s findings are reported in an article published in the most recent edition of Quaternary Science Reviews.

She said that other studies which have reported on the use of fire only verified the presence of burned archaeological materials, but were unable to penetrate further into the question of whether humans were “fire-makers” from the very early stages of fire-use.

“The new data from Gesher Benot Ya’akov is exceptional as it preserved evidence for fire-use throughout a very long occupational sequence. This continual, habitual, use of fire suggests that these early humans were not compelled to collect that fire from natural conflagrations, rather they were able to make fire at will,'' Alperson-Afil said.

The manipulation of fire by early man was clearly a turning point for man’s ancestors, Once “domesticated,” fire enabled protection from predators and provided warmth and light as well as enabling the exploitation of a new range of foods.

Said Alperson-Afil: “The powerful tool of fire-making provided ancient humans with confidence, enabling them to leave their early circumscribed surroundings and eventually populate new, unfamiliar environments.”



Downloadable File: FireOutofAfrica.doc

 

© All rights reserved to The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Department of Media Relations