-
- Oldest
indigenous African footprint
- ever
found in upper Africa
-
- Tracks
made 117,000 years ago in Africa
-
- August 14, 1997
-
- Footprints left on
a South African lagoon 117,000 Years ago have been identified
as the oldest fossilized tracks of an anatomically modern African
ever found.
The two amazingly preserved prints, each measuring 8 ½
inches long barefoot or about a 7 to 7 ½ woman's shoe
size, represent a rare discovery from the crucial but poorly
understood period of history when modern indigenous Africans
first appeared, according to researchers who announced the discovery
Thursday, (August 14, 1997).
The smallish individual who ventured barefoot down the sandy
incline was an indigenous African, probably a woman an about
5 feet 4 inches tall, who "looked just like us." the
researchers said. She lived in roughly the same time and place
as the hypothetical female known to paleoanthropologists as "African
Eve" or "Black Eve," the common genetic ancestor
of every person alive today.
"These footprints are traces of the earliest modern people,"
said Lee Berger, a Kansas-born paleoanthropologist based at the
University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Although special dating techniques show them to be ancient, the
position of the toes, the distribution of weight and the well-developed
arch are all so advanced that the prints "could have been
made yesterday," he said.
Lee Berger and Colleague David Roberts discussed their discovery
at National Geographic Society headquarters in Washington. where
casts of the prints and related items are on display through
Sept. 15. The work is described in the September issue of National
Geographic magazine and in the August issue of the South African
Journal of Science.
The tracks were discovered in September, 1995, in what was once
a steel) sand dune, now hardened to gray sandstone, along Langebaan
Lagoon, about 60 miles north of Cape Town. "Hundreds of
people had walked over that area including scientists, and not
noticed the prints." Berger said.
The odds were "one in millions" that such prints would
be preserved and then be found by someone expert enough to recognize
what they were, Berger said. A paleoanthropologist such as him
never would even have looked. "It took a geologist, who
didn't know how impossible the event was."
-
- Roberts, a South African
geologist from the Council for Geoscience, said he was inspired
to scramble up and down the rock faces on a search for footprints
after finding fossilized carnivore tracks and evidence of toolmaking
in ancient sedimentary rocks timing the lagoon.
"On a hunch, I began searching for hominids footprints and
found them!" he said. (The term hominid refers to the family
of two-legged primates that includes humans.) Berger said the
team hopes to try to follow the trail of footprints back into
the hills, but he acknowledged it will take "one hell of
a mining operation."
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