The discovery of 400,000-year-old fire-making evidence in Suffolk represents the most remarkable breakthrough in understanding human evolution, proving Neanderthals possessed sophisticated knowledge of flint and pyrite properties far earlier than imagined. This ability to create and control fire freed humans from dependence on natural fires, enabling them to choose campsites, process wider food varieties and fuel brain development that fundamentally transformed survival and social bonding.
The Suffolk fire claim stretches circumstantial evidence beyond what the data supports, lacking the smoking gun of wear traces on flint tools that definitively prove fire-making at later Neanderthal sites. Fire-making developed through scattered fits and starts across multiple groups who discovered, lost and rediscovered the ability over time rather than representing any singular evolutionary breakthrough.
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