Footprints left behind by prehistoric people maybe some of the strongest evidence yet that humans arrived in the Americas earlier than previously thought.
Over 60 “ghost tracks” — so-called because they pop up and disappear across the landscape — show that people romped through what’s now New Mexico 23,000 to 21,000 years ago, geoscientists report. If true, the fossil findings would be definitive proof that humans were in North America during the height of the last ice age, which peaked around 21,500 years ago.
When people first arrived in the Americas is highly contested. Scientists have historically thought that humans traveled across the Bering land bridge that connected Asia to North America around 13,000 years ago after the massive Laurentide Ice Sheet that once blanketed much of North America had started retreating into the Arctic. But a slew of more recent discoveries from across North and South America — including roughly 30,000-year-old animal bones from a Mexican cave and stone tools from Texas — suggest that humans may have arrived far earlier.
At White Sands National Park scientists used several methods to calculate the ages of the newly described tracks, including radiocarbon dating of aquatic plants embedded in and between the footprints. One of the beautiful things about footprints is that, unlike stone tools or bones, they can’t be moved up or down the stratigraphy,. They’re fixed, and they’re very precise. But some archaeologists aren’t yet convinced of the footprints’ ages.
This is the kind of stuff that makes you rewrite textbooks. But if further verification confirms the age of the tracks, the discovery will show us that people have this amazing ability to survive and thrive during a time when global conditions were extreme.
The tracks were created over two millennia mostly by children and teenagers wandering through the patchwork of waterways that defined the White Sands area during the Ice Age, the researchers say. The footprints were found alongside those of mammoths, giant ground sloths and other megafauna that flocked to water in the largely arid landscape.
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