Cooking began 600,000 years earlier than we thought
Researchers say people started using fire to cook food 600,000 years before previously thought. Archeologists from a university in Israel claim that our early ancestors used fire to cook fish 770,000 years ago. These prehistoric humans lived alongside the banks of the Jordan River in present-day Israel. They used fire to cook "huge fish" they caught in a nearby lake. Until this new discovery, scientists believed that the first "definitive evidence" of cooking was by Neanderthals and early Homo sapiens, around 170,000 years ago. The researchers will now look for more signs of prehistoric cooking. |