The Japan Times - Ice-age footprints shed light on North America's early humans

EUR -
AED 4.277861
AFN 77.136147
ALL 96.657949
AMD 444.757798
ANG 2.08512
AOA 1068.154478
ARS 1678.808333
AUD 1.754654
AWG 2.098161
AZN 1.978573
BAM 1.957987
BBD 2.34611
BDT 142.338967
BGN 1.95787
BHD 0.439079
BIF 3444.346704
BMD 1.164836
BND 1.509986
BOB 8.048989
BRL 6.361141
BSD 1.164796
BTN 104.721505
BWP 15.516329
BYN 3.383779
BYR 22830.783798
BZD 2.342716
CAD 1.614131
CDF 2597.583856
CHF 0.93502
CLF 0.027447
CLP 1076.809445
CNY 8.227936
CNH 8.229012
COP 4473.855162
CRC 573.54054
CUC 1.164836
CUP 30.868152
CVE 110.388283
CZK 24.251359
DJF 207.420761
DKK 7.469021
DOP 75.023788
DZD 151.614484
EGP 55.494063
ERN 17.472539
ETB 181.440736
FJD 2.646272
FKP 0.874683
GBP 0.873732
GEL 3.133595
GGP 0.874683
GHS 13.371934
GIP 0.874683
GMD 85.623095
GNF 10132.315939
GTQ 8.916959
GYD 243.702171
HKD 9.064602
HNL 30.680264
HRK 7.535437
HTG 152.529693
HUF 383.333535
IDR 19401.623369
ILS 3.766054
IMP 0.874683
INR 104.64758
IQD 1525.904155
IRR 49039.591876
ISK 148.598106
JEP 0.874683
JMD 186.788609
JOD 0.825897
JPY 182.17102
KES 150.554416
KGS 101.864659
KHR 4667.21242
KMF 493.89021
KPW 1048.348457
KRW 1712.185734
KWD 0.357663
KYD 0.970684
KZT 603.901855
LAK 25261.212141
LBP 104310.195358
LKR 359.701721
LRD 205.589606
LSL 19.799512
LTL 3.439457
LVL 0.704598
LYD 6.33908
MAD 10.766024
MDL 19.831148
MGA 5200.808349
MKD 61.603703
MMK 2446.793693
MNT 4134.417229
MOP 9.336327
MRU 46.452879
MUR 53.873448
MVR 17.930198
MWK 2019.847129
MXN 21.189629
MYR 4.796816
MZN 74.44481
NAD 19.799512
NGN 1694.777782
NIO 42.867876
NOK 11.824879
NPR 167.555128
NZD 2.014054
OMR 0.447884
PAB 1.164801
PEN 3.916174
PGK 4.94252
PHP 68.955374
PKR 329.267131
PLN 4.223987
PYG 7936.864021
QAR 4.246142
RON 5.088581
RSD 117.437603
RUB 91.00593
RWF 1695.393444
SAR 4.371075
SBD 9.587289
SCR 15.685695
SDG 700.645729
SEK 10.860272
SGD 1.509051
SHP 0.873929
SLE 28.068787
SLL 24426.024407
SOS 664.542172
SRD 44.982457
STD 24109.751503
STN 24.527287
SVC 10.192383
SYP 12879.402776
SZL 19.792104
THB 37.088773
TJS 10.774633
TMT 4.088574
TND 3.423824
TOP 2.804645
TRY 49.625766
TTD 7.898822
TWD 36.333543
TZS 2855.727986
UAH 49.312873
UGX 4158.626572
USD 1.164836
UYU 45.650984
UZS 13981.6149
VES 300.069051
VND 30701.580029
VUV 142.017642
WST 3.24734
XAF 656.690403
XAG 0.019252
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.148027
XCG 2.099336
XDR 0.817204
XOF 656.690403
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.842465
ZAR 19.791901
ZMK 10484.906002
ZMW 27.088253
ZWL 375.076687
  • RBGPF

    -1.5200

    77.68

    -1.96%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    2.1900

    74.19

    +2.95%

  • BTI

    1.2300

    58.52

    +2.1%

  • RIO

    0.5600

    74.96

    +0.75%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.22

    -0.09%

  • RELX

    0.5300

    40.07

    +1.32%

  • NGG

    -0.1500

    74.74

    -0.2%

  • GSK

    0.8400

    48.11

    +1.75%

  • BP

    0.0450

    35.595

    +0.13%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2300

    14.6

    -1.58%

  • VOD

    0.0350

    12.535

    +0.28%

  • JRI

    0.0220

    13.723

    +0.16%

  • CMSD

    -0.0610

    23.159

    -0.26%

  • BCE

    0.0890

    23.239

    +0.38%

  • AZN

    -0.0400

    89.78

    -0.04%

Ice-age footprints shed light on North America's early humans
Ice-age footprints shed light on North America's early humans / Photo: Handout - HANDOUT/AFP

Ice-age footprints shed light on North America's early humans

Footprints laid down by Ice-Age hunter-gatherers and recently discovered in a US desert are shedding new light on North America's earliest human inhabitants.

Text size:

Dozens of fossilized prints found in dried-up riverbeds in the western state of Utah reveal more details about how the continent's original occupants lived more than 12,000 years ago -- just as the frozen planet was starting to thaw.

The fossils could have remained unnoticed if not for a chance glance out of a moving car as researchers Daron Duke and Thomas Urban drove through Hill Air Force Base chatting about footprints.

"We were talking about 'what would they look like?'," Duke told AFP. "And he said: Kind of like that out the window.'"

What the two men had found turned out to be 88 distinct prints left by a mixture of adults and children.

"They vary between just looking like discolored patches on the ground and... little pop ups, little pieces of dirt around them or on them. But they look like footprints," Duke said.

What came next was a painstaking few days of very careful digging -- sometimes lying on his belly -- to ensure that what they were looking at was as old as it appeared.

"What I found was bare feet of people... that had stepped in what looks to be shallow water where there was a mud sub layer," Duke explained.

"The minute they pulled their foot out, the sand infilled that and has preserved it perfectly."

Duke, of the Nevada-based Far Western Anthropological Research Group, had been in the area looking for evidence of prehistoric campfires built by the Shoshone, a people whose descendents still live in the western United States.

He had brought Urban over from Cornell University because of his expertise in uncovering evidence of ancient humans -- including the discovery of human tracks in New Mexico's White Sands National Park that are thought to be up to 23,000 years old.

- 'Awestruck' -

The new fossils add to a wealth of other finds from the area, including stone tools, evidence of tobacco use, bird bones and campfire remains, that are starting to provide a more complete record of the Shoshone and their continuous presence in the region beginning 13,000 years ago.

"These are the resident indigenous people of North America, this is where they lived, and this is where they still live today," Urban said.

For him personally, finding the footprints has been a professional high point.

"Once I... realized I was digging a human footprint, I was seeing toes, I was seeing the thing in immaculate condition... I was just kind of awestruck by it," he said.

"Nothing beats the sense of discovery and awe that maybe as an archaeologist, you are actually chasing your whole career."

And sharing the discovery with the distant descendents of the people who made the prints was immensely rewarding, Urban said.

"You realize the same thing is happening -- what the connection is to such a distant past and to something so human, I think it gets to everybody in one way or another eventually."

K.Inoue--JT