5 comments

  • kid641 hour ago
    The whole idea of dependence on recurring natural fires always seemed suspect to me.
    • AlotOfReading26 minutes ago
      It shouldn&#x27;t. It&#x27;s been extensively documented among modern human groups.<p>The major question is how much our understanding from recent forager groups applies to pleistocene foragers (&quot;ethnographic analogy&quot;). I&#x27;m in the generally skeptical camp. Many other anthropologists aren&#x27;t, particularly those in older generations.
  • tclancy4 hours ago
    Either I missed it or the author assumed we were both on the same page: GBY seems to be a spot on a river just north of the Sea of Galilee.<p>GBV continues to be the band, who are due to release albums with each of these names within the next five years.
    • showerst3 hours ago
      GBY is Gesher Bnot Ya&#x27;akov, an archeological site in Israel, it’s in the first paragraph of the abstract.
    • _alternator_2 hours ago
      The site also has been dated to ~790,000 years old. Also was hard to find in a quick skim. So, direct evidence of the types of firewood humans have been using for the better part of a million years. Neat.
  • SummSolutions2 hours ago
    Fascinating paper, providing great evidence that our ancestors were maximizing resources hundreds of thousands of years ago.
    • frutiger2 hours ago
      Our ancestors have been “maximizing resources” for hundreds of millions of years, and all our living relatives alive today continue to do so.
  • l4tq31 hour ago
    [dead]
  • thunkle2 hours ago
    There was a problem providing the content you requested