Earliest fire-making dating back 400k years unearthed in Suffolk, England
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By Josh Davis

First published 10 December 2025

The controlled use of fire is one of the reasons our species was able to survive and spread around the world.

But the newly unearthed evidence of the earliest fire-making shows that we were not the first species to master the flame.

“It’s an astounding discovery. This is a game-changer in the field.”

Together with his colleagues, Simon Parfitt has been digging at a site near Barnham, Suffolk, for almost two decades. They have unearthed the remains of lions, beavers, and monkeys. But it is a couple of tiny two-centimetre fragments of rock that are set to turn the history of human evolution upside down.

Known as pyrite, the fragments were found with hearths of 400,000-year-old campfires. Rather incredibly, they show t…

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