Actually the very first hominid to use fire was Homo Erectus.
Red pyramid is written in first person point of view along with The throne of fire .
It partly depends on what you mean by fire; if you consider the sun is producing "fire" (and, by implication the other stars also produce fire) then the first stars are thought to have appeared around 13.7 billion years ago.You might argue that the stars produce superheated plasma, rather than fire. On Earth, fires are naturally caused by thunderstorms, where lightning hits flammable materials. Indeed, some plants (the Giant Redwood is one) have evolved so that they need occasional fires as part of their life cycle.Evidence of controlled fire use has been found from Peking Man caves from around 790,000 years ago. At that time, the Earth was going through an Ice Age so it would have been pretty chilly! It's impossible to know if the fire was started naturally - from a branch captured from a lightning struck tree - or artificially.
first person last and third
The first person Odysseus met was Eumaeus his swineherd.
Chelsea Lockley
first person who use map
homo erectus were the first to use fire
First of all, NEVER look at a person near you, it makes you want to talk to that person. Second, imagine you are in a jail cell with nobody there. that's two ways I use to be quiet in a fire drill.
First person are I, me, my.
An american
A person can make a website through MediaFire by first uploading their content to the site itself. A person will then use an FTP service to create a website of their choice.
The first person to use silver was sio green
Yes, you can use first person in an abstract, but it is generally recommended to use third person for a more formal tone.
The Greeks.
well is was a girl called mary swever she cut the wood and made a fire because lightning touched the wood.
Yes. But there are different kinds of fire extinguishers. If the person's clothing is on fire, you would use a water-type (Class A extinguisher). If they were covered in flammable liquid or gas (e.g., propane), you may need to use CO2. Do not spray CO2 near a person's face, to avoid them inhaling it and damaging their lungs. If you use CO2 on them for a prolonged period of time they may suffocate due to the lack of oxygen or if you are too close to them you may freeze their skin. Commonly known as CO2 burn, because it will feel like the skin is on fire when it is actually just the capillaries freezing, like frostbite.