Humans living along the northern shores of East Africa's Lake Malawi were altering the local ecosystem with fire as early as 92,000 years ago, according to a new study.
Analysis of stone artifacts and paleoenvironmental data -- detailed Wednesday in the journal Science Advances -- suggests fire use by early humans prevented regrowth of the region's forests, yielding the expansive bushland that persists today.
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Humans living along the northern shores of East Africa's Lake Malawi were altering the local ecosystem with fire as early as 92,000 years ago, according to a new study.
>
Analysis of stone artifacts and paleoenvironmental data -- detailed Wednesday in the journal Science Advances -- suggests fire use by early humans prevented regrowth of the region's forests, yielding the expansive bushland that persists today.
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