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Discovery Of Fossilized Human Footprints In An Ancient Lakebed
Live Science
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11 months ago
Researchers have discovered fossil human footprints embedded in an ancient lakebed that show humans inhabited North America during the Last Glacial Maximum, in what is now New Mexico.
Credit: National Park Service, USGS and Bournemouth University
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00:00
An international team of researchers have been working at the White Sands National Park
00:07
in New Mexico to determine the age of the footprint traces that occur so abundantly
00:12
there.
00:13
The human footprints are associated with Pleistocene megafauna and are found on the margins and
00:18
bed of what was a lake.
00:21
David Bustos, resources manager at the park, explains.
00:25
For years we've been seeing really incredible fossil footprints of mammoth and people and
00:30
camels and giant ground sloth, all kinds of incredible megafauna alongside human prints
00:37
throughout the park at different elevations.
00:41
Sometimes the prints have been made of clay, sometimes made of dolomite, sometimes they
00:44
were in a sandy material.
00:46
For years we've been wondering how old are these human prints, are they as old as the
00:50
megafauna?
00:52
To address the age of the footprint traces, a new excavation was made in January 2020
00:58
to reveal the stratigraphic context of the footprint layers.
01:01
Kathleen Springer, working with Jeff Pigatti, both of the US Geological Survey, undertook
01:07
the dating, as described by Kathleen.
01:10
Our work involved a detailed stratigraphic analysis of the individual layers of this
01:16
ancient lake that the human footprints are found in, and then dating the abundant seeds
01:22
that occur on all of these horizons with radiocarbon.
01:26
The significance of the site and work is outlined by Vance Holliday from the University of Arizona.
01:32
It is now the oldest well-documented archaeological site in the Americas, with evidence of human
01:38
activity from about 23,000 to 21,000 years ago.
01:43
That was during the last ice age in New Mexico.
01:47
I'm Dan Otis from the National Park Service.
01:50
This discovery is important because it confirms that humans were in North America much earlier
01:54
than many people believe.
01:57
Unlike other sites where people disagree about whether broken stones and bones are products
02:01
of human action, or they worry that younger artifacts might somehow have been introduced
02:06
into older deposits, what we have at White Sands National Park are stratified layers
02:11
containing indisputably human tracks alongside those of extinct ice age mammals.
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