Posted on 10/19/2003 4:26:28 PM PDT by blam
Early Evidence Of Fire Found
Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News
Oct. 17, 2003 Construction work to build a relief road for a British village has revealed one of the earliest evidences of fire in Europe, British archaeologists announced.
Charcoal deposits that might date back between 250,000 and 300,000 years ago, were discovered in Harnham, a village one mile south of Salisbury on South Wiltshire's Chalklands, England.
"It's really an exciting discovery. It has come out of the blue as air photography showed nothing of significance. The presence of charcoal suggests the people there made fires. It would seem natural as the climate was cold and damp at the time," archaeologist Helena Cave Penny told Discovery News.
Excavation also uncovered animal bones, such as horse bones, and 44 "very rare" flint hand axes the earliest form of tool used by man.
"The site was next to a tributary of the River Avon. We believe it was used as a seasonal riverside camp," Cave Penny said.
Revealing the shadow of hunters who probably made fire and sat by the river using axes as butchery tools to carve up meat, the prehistoric riverside "picnic" site dates to the lower Paleolithic (early Stone Age) era.
Characterized by flint implements simply chipped into shape, this is a crucial period as it saw the development of those features that make us human loss of thick body hair; bipedal; tool-making; use of fire; the creation of clothing and weapons and probably the development of language.
Showing plenty of evidence of Stone Age sites, England boasts the largest area of preserved Paleolithic land surface in Europe at Boxgrove, West Sussex.
According to Roy Canham, County Archaeologist for Wiltshire, the Chalkland area near Salisbury might have potential for new discoveries.
"This finding can help our understanding of the period. The use of fire may have to remain speculative, but the evidence really looks OK," Canham said.
The findings will be catalogued and put on display in Salisbury Museum.
Excavation also uncovered animal bones, such as horse bones, and 44 "very rare" flint hand axes the earliest form of tool used by man.
Flint occurs as "nodules" within chalk deposits. Flint was eventually traded but at this very early date perhaps only those who lived right on top of the chalk were able to make flint tools.
NOW I get it....(groan)
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