| Literature DB >> 28680931 |
Abstract
Humans today live in a wide range of environments from the iciest to the hottest, thanks to diverse cultural solutions that buffer temperature extremes. The prehistory of this relationship between human distribution, cultural solutions and temperature conditions may help us to understand the evolution of human biological adaptations to cold temperature. Fire has long been seen as an important factor in human evolution and range expansion, particularly into temperate latitudes. Nevertheless, the earliest evidence for hominin presence in Eurasia, and middle latitudes in northern Europe, substantially predates convincing evidence for fire use in these regions. This review outlines the current state of knowledge of the chronology of hominin dispersal into temperate latitudes, from the earliest occupants to our own species, and the archeological evidence for fire use. Given continuing disagreement about this chronology and limitations to the archeological evidence, new, complementary approaches are worthwhile and would benefit from information from studies of current human temperature regulation.Entities:
Keywords: Lower and Middle Palaeolithic; fire use; human evolution; middle latitudes; thermal tolerance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28680931 PMCID: PMC5489006 DOI: 10.1080/23328940.2017.1284637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Temperature (Austin) ISSN: 2332-8940