BBC Science Focus Magazine

LIKE MODERN HUMANS, HOMO NALEDI HARNESSED FIRE FOR LIGHT, WARMTH AND COOKING

It's often said the ability to make fire is one of the key skills that defines Homo sapiens – it allowed our ancestors to cook food, keep warm and eventually become the most dominant species on the planet.

Recently, evidence has been found across Europe to suggest that Neanderthals were also skilled fire users, but, an extinct species of hominid that lived 200,000 to 300,000 years ago, also used fire.

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