Around 400,000 B.C.E., a group of hominids in what is now central Israel returned — as they had many times before — to the same spot inside a limestone cave. They tended a flame. They cooked meat over it. They sat near its warmth as the night closed in. In doing so, they were practicing something that would alter the trajectory of human life more profoundly than almost any other development in our species’ history.
Key findings
- Early human fire use: The most widely accepted direct evidence for controlled fire comes from Qesem Cave in present-day Israel, where hearths and burned animal bones dated to between 300,000 and 400,000 B.C.E. document deliberate, repeated fire management.
- Cooking and cognition: Cooking dramatically increased the calories and digestible nutrients available from food — likely providing the metabolic surplus that supported the development of larger, more energy-demanding human brains over generations.
- Social hearth: The fire site became a gathering point — a place to share food, reinforce group bonds, and, over time, lay the foundations of increasingly complex community life that distinguished early humans from other hominids.
What the evidence actually shows
Qesem Cave, excavated by researchers from Tel Aviv University, has yielded some of the richest direct evidence for controlled fire use in the archaeological record. Ash deposits, burned animal bones, and signs of repeated hearth activity in the same location tell a consistent story: this was not accidental burning. The hominids who used this cave — likely Homo heidelbergensis or a closely related archaic human population — returned to these fire sites deliberately and regularly.
It is important to be precise about what “control” means here. Qesem Cave documents managed fire use — maintaining, feeding, and directing a flame — not necessarily fire-making from scratch. The ability to ignite fire independently, using friction or struck flint, is harder to pin to a specific date and remains a subject of ongoing scholarly discussion. What the cave shows clearly is that fire had already become a routine part of daily life, not an occasional windfall from a lightning strike.
Evidence of cooked food goes back even further — to roughly 1,000,000 B.C.E. at sites like Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa — though interpretations of that evidence remain more contested. The picture that emerges across sites is one of gradual, uneven adoption: fire use spreading, deepening, and becoming more sophisticated over hundreds of thousands of years across different hominin populations and regions.
Why cooking changed everything
The biological consequences of cooking food were enormous. Raw plant matter and meat require significant digestive energy to process. Cooking breaks down cell walls and denatures proteins, making more calories and nutrients available with less metabolic effort. Harvard biologist Richard Wrangham has argued that the shift to cooked food was a primary driver of the anatomical changes that distinguish Homo sapiens from earlier hominids — including smaller teeth, shorter digestive tracts, and, critically, larger brains.
Fire also killed pathogens. Cooking meat reduced exposure to parasites and bacteria that could sicken or kill. Over generations, this contributed to improved survival rates and longer lives — more time to learn, teach, and pass knowledge forward.
And fire extended the day. With light after dark, early humans could remain active, social, and productive beyond the limits that darkness had always imposed. The anthropologist Polly Wiessner has documented how firelit evenings among contemporary hunter-gatherer communities are disproportionately used for storytelling — suggesting that fire may have been the original medium for transmitting culture across generations.
Lasting impact
The downstream consequences of early human fire use are almost impossible to overstate. Fire eventually enabled the smelting of metals, the firing of ceramics, the clearing of land for agriculture, and the development of every heat-based technology that followed. The Smithsonian Institution places controlled fire among the handful of developments that most directly shaped the arc of human civilization.
More immediately, fire allowed early humans to survive in colder environments and venture into new geographic ranges. It protected sleeping groups from large predators. It enabled the processing of materials — hardening wooden tools, shaping bone and antler — that would otherwise have been inaccessible.
Perhaps most durably, the hearth created a social architecture. Sitting around a shared fire imposes a kind of equality: everyone faces the center, everyone shares the warmth, everyone participates in the light. That geometry may have reinforced the cooperative social structures that allowed early human groups to survive and ultimately to thrive at a scale no other large primate has achieved. The archaeological record increasingly suggests that social complexity and fire use co-evolved, each enabling and reinforcing the other.
Blindspots and limits
The archaeological record for fire is geographically uneven. Much of the best-documented evidence comes from Europe and the Middle East, where excavation has been most intensive. Fire use in Africa — where Homo sapiens evolved — likely predates and parallels these sites, but the evidence is fragmentary and harder to date with precision. Communities across sub-Saharan Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and Australia developed distinct fire practices, including sophisticated landscape management through controlled burning, that are underrepresented in mainstream accounts of fire’s history.
Fire also came with costs from the start: smoke inhalation, accidental burns, and the risk of uncontrolled spread were real dangers for early users. The relationship between humans and fire has never been simple or purely beneficial.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Fire
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights and the 160 million hectares recognized at COP30
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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