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Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Saturday, January 4, 2014
Discovery of oldest footprints gives clues to Mexico's climate
The oldest human footprints in North America have been dated for the
first time and could help scientists to understand what Mexico's climate
was like 7000 years ago.
Discovery of oldest footprints gives clues to Mexico's climate
Museum specimens [Credit: Nick Felstead]
The new climate data, published in the Journal of Archaeological
Science, comes from two sets of footprints found in the Chihuahuan
desert in north-eastern Mexico.
The first of these sets was discovered in 1961 after workmen stumbled
across them while building a road. At the time they were removed and
placed in a museum where, despite being described in detail, their
provenance was lost.
A team of researchers, from John Moores University in Liverpool, who
were interested in where these prints came from began interviewing local
people to see if they could find more. Eventually, in 2006, another
track was found in a quarry.
'When we discovered these new prints, they were preserved in the same
material as the ones in the museum. So we presumed it was a rediscovery
of these lost footprints as opposed to a new discovery,' explains Dr
Nick Felstead now of Durham University, lead researcher on the project.
To see if the two sets of prints were from the same track the teams
needed to work out their age. So, they used oxygen and carbon isotopes
in the surrounding material to work out when our ancestors made the
prints.
Discovery of oldest footprints gives clues to Mexico's climate
Tracks in situ [Credit: Nick Felstead]
'The age of the prints in the museum had been given a best-guess at
being around 10 to 15,000 years old, but they had never actually been
dated,' says Felstead. 'The two sets of dates came back at 10.5 thousand
years and seven thousand years old, so by age alone we knew they were
separate; they couldn't have been same trackways.'
At 10.5 thousand years old, the museum footprints pre-date the oldest
evidence of humans previously known in the area – a 9000 year old piece
of human faeces.
Having dated the two sets of footprints the scientists decided to look
at what the climate was like when these humans laid down these
trackways.
The prints were preserved in sediments known as travertine – a mineral
that precipitates out when water percolates through limestone rocks - so
the scientists knew the area must have been far wetter than it is
today. The water which formed the travertine also contains minute traces
of uranium, and it was this that enabled the team to date the
footprints. Over time uranium decays and turns into thorium, by
measuring the ratio of uranium to thorium the scientists were able to
determine how old the footprints were.
'It's in the middle of the Chihuahua desert, everyone always thinks that
deserts are hot, arid and hostile but these footprints show us that
during the Holocene, the desert was just coming out of a period of
glaciation and had only just started to dry out,' Felstead says. 'It's a
window into a time when the desert was wet enough to support a much
greater range of life.'
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