No one will ever know for certain (unless they invent time travel) as prehistoric people did not leave written records (or pendrives or anything else) of what they did and when they did it. ----- Obviously fire was started spontaneously, by such things as lightning, the trick was to nurture it, control it, and have it available when needed. Some dried fungi have properties that enable them to smoulder for a long time if kept dry. They can then be blown into a glowing ember sufficient to ignite fine moss and produce flame. The next step was probably the trick of making sparks on demand from flintstones.
Prehistoric man could make fire by rubbing two pieces of wood or hitting flint stones together.
bueno la verdad no puedo saber si esta pagina no me da la respuesta para un trabajo q tengo de HATCHET
Lightning struck a tall hut which burst in to flames>
they captured it. they also hadn't yet thought of the wheel.
By striking FLINT against STEEL over TINDER. Join the Boy Scouts of America and learn how to do it. It could save your life.
The most common way to make fire in primitive cultures was the hand drill. The bow drill was also common.
w did the aztecs make fire
Bombardier beetles well kinda but they don't make fire they make fire acid
what stones can make fire
no kids did not make fire sorry
you start with fire
Make him the owner of the company, and nobody can fire him.
You can make the words Frei, rife, and reif out of the word fire.
make one saltpeter and 5 fire
you cant but at the cove there is fire
fire + earth + Fire + Fire
No- It only feels like fire when they sting you.
i think no because it will just make the fire worst