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South African cave could be oldest human home say researchers

South African cave could be oldest human home say researchers Daniel Capurro © Greatstock / Alamy Stock Photo Entrance to the Wonderwerk Caves which houses famous Bushman paintings,Kuruman,Northern Cape  - Greatstock / Alamy Stock Photo  Researchers believe they may have found the earliest known human home in a South African cave, with evidence of domesticity there dating as far back as two million years. The Canadian-Israeli team found traces of the earliest ever use of fire, at least one million years ago, and of hand tools in the 140-metre-deep Wonderwerk Cave in the southern Kalahari Desert. The cave has been studied by archaeologists ever since it was first discovered by local farmers in 1940 and has produced a steady stream of archaeological breakthroughs.

Archaeologists find oldest home in human history, dating to 2 million years ago

Get email notification for articles from Ruth Schuster Follow Apr. 26, 2021 5:00 AM Archaeologists have found the oldest home in hominin history. Unsurprisingly, it is a cave: Wonderwerk Cave in the Kalahari Desert. Astonishingly, it has been occupied more or less continuously for two million years. Through most of that time, modern humans didn’t even exist. The archaeologists have also demonstrated the earliest-ever use of fire, a million years ago, and of symbolic thinking half a million years ago in Wonderwerk Cave, report Ron Shaar, Ari Matmon, Liora Kolska Horwitz, Yael Ebert and Michael Chazan in Quaternary Science Reviews.  Among the signs of advanced cognitive ability, the archaeologists believe they have found indications that ocher may have been used there 500,000 to 300,000 years ago – hundreds of thousands of years earlier than thought.

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