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Discovery of a unique drainage and irrigation system that gave way to the “Neolithic Revolution” in the Amazon

Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona—A pre-Columbian society in the Amazon developed a sophisticated agricultural engineering system that allowed them to produce maize throughout the year, according to a recent discovery by a team of researchers from the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology (ICTA-UAB) and the Department of Prehistory at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, (Spain); the Universities of Exeter, Nottingham, Oxford, Reading and Southampton (UK); the University of São Paulo (Brazil) and Bolivian collaborators. This finding contradicts previous theories that dismissed the possibility of intensive monoculture agriculture in the region.

The study*, published today in the journal Nature, describes how the pre-Hispanic Casarabe society of the Llanos de Moxos in Bolivia designed and implemented an innovative landscape engineering system, including the construction of extensive drainage canals and farm ponds. This advancement allowed the transformation of flooded tropical savannahs into highly productive fields, thereby driving the development of the “Neolithic Revolution” in the Amazon, understood as the process towards an economy based on grain production.

This region, inhabited by the Casarabe people between 500 and 1400 A.D., is a tropical lowland savannah marked by intense rainy seasons and flooding, as well as very dry seasons. The discovery, led by Umberto Lombardo, an environmental archaeologist at the UAB, has identified a unique agricultural infrastructure previously undocumented anywhere else in the world.. This system enabled them to drain excess water from flooded fields during the rainy season, facilitating agricultural productivity. In addition to the drainage canals, the Casarabe people constructed clusters of farm ponds that served as water reservoirs. These ponds enabled pot-irrigation, allowing maize cultivation to continue throughout the dry season.

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This dual water management system enabled at least two harvests of maize per year, ensuring a stable food supply year-round, which was essential for sustaining a relatively large population. “This intensive agricultural strategy indicates that maize was not only cultivated but was likely the staple crop of the Casarabe culture,” explains Lombardo.

This agricultural model did not rely on traditional slash-and-burn techniques used to create fertile fields. Instead, the Casarabe people preserved nearby forests for other purposes, such as obtaining firewood and medicinal plants, while implementing practices that maximized the efficient use of water and soil in the seasonally flooded savannas.

These conclusions were made possible through meticulous fieldwork combining techniques such as microbotanical analysis, remote sensing, and environmental archaeology. The analysis of 178 phytolith (plant microfossils) and pollen samples from a farm pond confirmed the presence of maize in the fields and the crucial role of maize monoculture in the diet of this pre-Columbian society. “The data shows the absence of other types of crops,” Lombardo adds.

“We can document that this is the first grain-based agrarian economy in the Amazon, where until now it was believed that agriculture was based on agroforestry polyculture and not on large-scale monocultures. Now we know that this was not the case in Llanos de Moxos”, says Lombardo, who asserts that this innovative piece of engineering allowed for the transformation of a challenging environment into a productive system that ensured food stability and supported the development of a growing population.

The research not only sheds light on the technological capabilities of pre-Columbian civilizations but also offers valuable lessons for modern agricultural sustainability. This discovery is a testament to the ingenuity and adaptability of the Casarabe people, who thrived due to their ability to design long-term sustainable agricultural solutions in an adverse environment.

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Photo of ponds from airplane. Author Umberto Lombardo

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Article Source: Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona news release

*Maize monoculture supported pre-Columbian urbanism in southwestern Amazonia, Nature, 29-Jan-2025. 10.1038/s41586-024-08473-y 

Forgery and fiscal fraud: a new papyrus from Israel reveals a spectacular criminal case from the Roman empire

The Hebrew University of Jerusalem—Scholars from the Austrian Academy of Sciences, the University of Vienna and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem unveil a unique papyrus from the collections held by the Israel Antiquities Authority, offering rare insights into Roman legal proceedings and life in the Roman Near East. In a new publication* in the international scholarly journal Tyche, the research team reveals how the Roman imperial state dealt with financial crimes – specifically, tax fraud involving slaves – in the Roman provinces of Iudaea and Arabia. The new papyrus furnishes a strikingly direct view of Roman jurisdiction and legal practice, as well as important new information about a turbulent era shaken by two massive Jewish revolts against Roman rule. 

The longest Greek papyrus ever found in the Judaean Desert, comprising over 133 lines of text, has now been published for the first time. Initially misclassified as Nabataean, the papyrus remained unnoticed for decades until its rediscovery in 2014 by Prof. Hannah Cotton Paltiel, emerita of the Hebrew University. “I volunteered to organize documentary papyri in the Israel Antiquities Authority’s scrolls laboratory, and when I saw it, marked ‘Nabataean,’ I exclaimed, ‘It’s Greek to me!’” recalls Prof. Cotton Paltiel. In recognition of her discovery, the papyrus has been named P. Cotton, in line with papyrological conventions.

Recognizing the document’s extraordinary length, complex style, and potential ties to Roman legal proceedings, Prof. Cotton Paltiel assembled an international team to decipher it. The team, including Dr. Anna Dolganov of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Prof. Fritz Mitthof of the University of Vienna and Dr. Avner Ecker of Hebrew University, determined the document to be prosecutors’ notes for a trial before Roman officials on the eve of the Bar Kokhba revolt (132–136 CE), including a rapidly drafted transcript of the judicial hearing itself. The language is vibrant and direct, with one prosecutor advising another on the strength of various pieces of evidence and strategizing to anticipate objections. “This papyrus is extraordinary because it provides direct insight into trial preparations in this part of the Roman Empire,” says Dr. Dolganov. Dr. Ecker adds, “This is the best-documented Roman court case from Iudaea apart from the trial of Jesus.”

The papyrus details a gripping case involving forgery, tax evasion, and the fraudulent sale and manumission of slaves in the Roman provinces of Iudaea and Arabia, roughly corresponding to modern Israel and Jordan. The main defendants, Gadalias and Saulos, stand accused of corrupt dealings. Gadalias, the son of a notary and possibly a Roman citizen, had a criminal history involving violence, extortion, counterfeiting, and inciting rebellion. Saulos, his collaborator, orchestrated the fictitious sale and manumission of slaves without paying the requisite Roman taxes. To conceal their activities, the defendants forged documents. “Forgery and tax fraud carried severe penalties under Roman law, including hard labor or even capital punishment,” explains Dr. Dolganov.

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This criminal case unfolded between two major Jewish uprisings against Roman rule: the Jewish Diaspora revolt (115–117 CE) and the Bar Kokhba revolt (132–136 CE). Notably, the text implicates Gadalias and Saulos in rebellious activities during Emperor Hadrian’s visit to the region (129/130 CE) and names Tineius Rufus, the governor of Iudaea when the Bar Kokhba revolt began. In the wake of prior unrest, Roman authorities likely viewed the defendants with suspicion, connecting their crimes to broader conspiracies against the empire. “Whether they were indeed involved in rebellion remains an open question, but the insinuation speaks to the charged atmosphere of the time,” notes Dr. Dolganov. As Dr. Ecker points out, the nature of the crime raises questions, as “freeing slaves does not appear to be a profitable business model.” The enslaved individuals’ origins remain unclear, but the case may have involved illicit human trafficking or the Jewish biblical duty to redeem enslaved Jews.

The papyrus offers new insights into Roman law in the Greek-speaking eastern empire, referencing the governor of Iudaea’s assize tour and compulsory jury service. “This document shows that core Roman institutions documented in Egypt were also implemented throughout the empire,” notes Prof. Mitthof. The papyrus also showcases the Roman state’s ability to regulate private transactions even in remote regions. Likely originating from a hideout cave in the Judaean Desert during the Bar Kokhba revolt, its careful preservation remains a mystery, and the trial’s outcome may have been interrupted by the rebellion.

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Papyrus Cotton. (© Israel Antiquities Authority)

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Detail of the infrared image of the Papyrus Cotton. (© Israel Antiquities Authority)

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Article Source: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem news release.

*Forgery and Fiscal Fraud in Iudaea and Arabia on the Eve of the Bar Kokhba Revolt: Memorandum and Minutes of a Trial before a Roman Official (P.Cotton), Tyche, 20-Jan-2025. 10.25365/tyche-2023-38-5 
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The Venetian Republic Offers Powerful Lessons to an American One in Need of Repair

John P. Ruehl is an Australian-American journalist living in Washington, D.C., and a world affairs correspondent for the Independent Media Institute. He is a contributor to several foreign affairs publications, and his book, Budget Superpower: How Russia Challenges the West With an Economy Smaller Than Texas’, was published in December 2022.

Over more than a thousand years, Venice transformed from a modest refuge into a dominant Mediterranean power. Despite various crises and encircling empires, the Venetian Republic avoided foreign rule, revolution, and collapse.

It developed an adaptable and efficient political system, building on its semi-independence from the 5th century until Napoleon’s conquest in 1797. In an international system dominated by self-proclaimed democratic republics, the longevity and eventual downfall of Venice’s oligarchic republican model provides insights for tailoring governance to contemporary challenges. Its unique political structure inspired founding fathers of the United States, like Alexander Hamilton and John Adams, who looked to Venice’s early system when shaping the republic. By blending Roman legal principles, Byzantine refinements like the Justinian Code (a compilation of Roman laws shaped by Greek traditions that codified and systematized legal practices), and its original innovations, Venice became a symbol of stability, endurance, and independence.

The Origins of Venice and Its Push for Independence

Venetian society was deeply paternalistic, governed by a hereditary elite with limited public participation, and yet it contained many elements of distribution of powers and checks on authority that are ubiquitous today. Geopolitically savvy and culturally diverse, Venice was open to new and foreign influence while preserving its traditions. Venetian diplomat Gasparo Contarini’s 16th-century account, shaped by his family’s central role in Venetian politics, alongside other sources, highlights Venice’s self-proclamation as the Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia—the Most Serene Republic of Venice.

Venice’s origins, according to tradition, trace back to 421 AD, when Roman refugees fleeing invasions in northern Italy established self-governed settlements in the Venetian Lagoon. The Rialto, which became synonymous with Venice, only emerged as the city’s center 400 years later. The collapse of the Western Roman Empire in 476 left northern Italy contested, with instability driving more settlers to the lagoon.

During the 5th and 6th centuries, trade networks and influential families began to shape the region. They reflected a mix of loyalties: pro-Byzantine landowners tied to the mainland coexisted with a rising merchant class seeking autonomy, along with the Frankish factions loyal to Rome. These groups dominated the informal councils, assemblies, and tribune leadership roles that governed early Venetian society.

By the 7th century, Venetian settlers recognized Byzantine authority in exchange for protection and securing vital trade access. Historian John Julius Norwich emphasized the Byzantine’s role in shaping Venice’s identity, alongside its Roman heritage.

In 697 AD, the lagoon’s settlers elected their first doge (duke), marking the beginning of Venice’s independence. Initially, the doge’s authority required approval from Constantinople, but Byzantine authority in the region was never strong and gradually faded. Seeking stronger local governance to navigate the delicate political landscape, Venetians resisted certain Byzantine decrees and a revolt in 726 saw them elect their own doge without outside interference. In the early 9th century, Venice successfully secured greater autonomy from the Byzantine Empire while keeping the Frankish Empire at bay by playing a crucial role in mediating peace between them, a settlement later known as Pax Nicephori.

Over the following centuries, Venetian autonomy increased as it forged ties with Rome to enhance its influence in Europe. Venice’s role in the 1204 sack of Constantinople, led by Latin forces, solidified its independence as a sovereign republic, coinciding with the rise of powerful republican city-states across Italy. Its push for independence was vital in shaping a political system aligned with Venice’s unique needs, values, and aspirations as a sovereign state.

Constraining Doge Power and Creating a Republic

Like the Roman Republic, Venice lacked a formal written constitution or judicially enforced laws. Instead, its political system relied on unwritten customs, allowing flexibility in responding to new challenges, and also demonstrating that the republican culture depends on habits of the heart and mind more than documents that record statements of principle.

Though dominated by a hereditary elite, Venice’s republican system prioritized power decentralization, an unusual approach at the time that encouraged a balance of authority and political stability. Early doges ruled autocratically for life, often attempting to establish dynasties, leading to rivalries, assassinations, and exiles. By 1032, Venetian patricians chose to abolish de facto hereditary dogeship, and though the doge retained a lifetime title, they could be deposed or pressured to resign.

Secrecy was essential to shielding political affairs from outside influence. With few grand political rallies or public speeches, rivalries were mostly confined to private councils. This restraint also helped prevent stirring up public sentiment, avoiding sensationalism, and maintaining a sense of calm and order in the city.

Venetians were willing to adapt when necessary, but once a solution proved effective, they stuck with it. The threat of factionalism over the doge’s position, led by the Tiepolo and Dandolo families in the 1200s, prompted patricians to introduce a unique voting process for the doge in 1268. Combining lotteries and voting, this system would remain largely unchanged for the next 500 years.

Council members gathered and drew from an urn containing hundreds of balls (ballotta)—30 gold and the rest silver; those drawing gold advanced, while those who picked silver exited. The ballottino, a young attendant, managed the urns. The 30 who picked gold then repeated the lottery, reducing their number to nine. These nine members then deliberated and agreed on 40 candidates, each requiring a minimum of seven votes from the group of nine to be considered. The process continued: the 40 were reduced to 12, who nominated 25; the 25 to nine, who nominated 45, and finally, the 45 to 11, who selected 41 electors. The final electors deliberated and voted on the doge, who required a minimum of 25 votes to win.

The process combined the impartiality of lotteries with the selectivity of voting, minimizing the chance for corruption while ensuring the legitimacy of decisions through broad consensus. The often weeks-long change broke the families’ duopoly, and ensuing elections often took weeks.

Contarini observed that doges were neither glorified nor vilified. Their terms were subject to posthumous review, with poor leadership censured or erased from public memory, while the contributions of effective rulers were recognized. This helped to ensure that leadership was viewed as a collective effort rather than the achievement of any single individual.

Fear of the doge’s authority also led patricians to steadily decentralize power into hereditary committees, integrating government expertise within the oligarchy. This ensured balanced decision-making and reduced the risk of autocratic rule. In 1142, the Minor Council was established as a small executive body to assist and monitor the doge. This was followed by the Great Council in 1172, which became the foundation of Venetian governance and the principal legislative body, severely limiting the doge’s power. Membership in the Great Council was a lifetime privilege for patrician males.

From 1179, judicial authority was invested in the Quarantia Criminale (criminal law), followed later by two other Councils of Forty (highest appeal court). By the early 13th century, the Senate emerged from the Great Council, focusing on trade and foreign policy, and was composed of serving and former officials.

Meanwhile, in response to the failed 1310 revolt by Bajamonte Tiepolo, the Council of Ten was created to track down conspirators, later evolving to handle crises, conduct investigations, and oversee internal security. Despite rising governmental complexity, Venice’s bureaucracy remained efficient and avoided runaway growth.

Political offices outside the dogeship also faced constraints. Terms were typically limited to one year to prevent consolidation of power and reelections often required formal approval. Close relatives were prohibited from holding the same office, running in the same election, or voting in elections involving each other to prevent familial monopolies.

Contarini noted that accountability was shared among the elite. Nobles who supported candidates were held financially liable if those candidates were later convicted of embezzlement and unable to repay the amount. Corruption resulted in punishments such as property confiscation and exile, with the competitive noble families keeping each other in check.

As the doge’s role became largely symbolic, real power shifted to the Council of Ten, the Great Council, and the Senate. These bodies dominated Venetian politics during its Golden Age, Renaissance, and eventual collapse, adapting to changing needs while maintaining cohesion and expertise through overlapping membership.

The Arengo or Concio, a general assembly of Venetian general citizens, initially played a strong political role alongside the doge. However, Venice’s noble families were similarly distrustful of commoner influence through democracy. Public participation in governance declined sharply after the Serrata of 1297 or the closing of the Great Council, which solidified hereditary governance and saw the Arengo lose its political authority before it was formally abolished in 1423. These decisions effectively ended democracy in Venice and ensured political power remained concentrated among the nobles. Given the rarity of democracy at the time, this approach nonetheless permitted greater political stability by minimizing potential disruptions from populist movements.

Social Hierarchy and Economic Opportunities in Venice

The late 13th and early 14th centuries “marked the formal separation of the nobles from the rest of the population,” entrenching Venice’s oligarchy and placing the non-patrician majority—approximately 95 percent of the city’s population—under elite control. The disconnect between the elites and commoners could be stark—Contarini praised Venice’s commitment to protecting commoners during crises like the plague, but later accounts paint a less charitable picture.

Despite limited political representation and rigid social classes, Venice’s nobles managed to maintain enough support for the political system to survive. A tiered hierarchy emerged under them, with the cittadini—a privileged class of merchants, skilled artisans, notaries, and administrators—forming approximately eight percent of the population, while the majority were commoners (popolani).

Social hierarchy in Venice was strictly enforced, with laws dictating what each class could wear. Intermarriage between patricians and cittadini was rare, though the latter class experienced regular turnover. Richer cittadini often surpassed certain aristocratic families in wealth, while patricians invested in merchant enterprises, creating economic interdependence.

The cittadini also controlled the civil service, led by the Grand Chancellor of Venice—the highest-ranking non-noble official. Through the Order of Secretaries, the cittadini served as notaries, clerks, tax collectors, and judicial officers. The wealthiest of their families with long-standing Venetian roots (cittadini originari) were included in the Book of Silver and granted additional opportunities in committees. Granting the cittadini some political influence prevented the patricians from completely dominating government affairs and ensured efficiency through their administrative expertise.

Despite the large and relatively powerless commoner class, Venice avoided the social upheavals common in other Italian city-states. According to Dennis Romano, professor emeritus of history at Syracuse University, 14th-century Venice remained stable because patricians and commoners were less rigidly separated, and tradition coexisted with flexibility. Social networks could overlap and legal and moral boundaries occasionally blurred during this period. Social rules were relaxed during holidays and festivals, elevating a sense of civic community, while commoners could participate in religious roles, including as members of the clergy.

Symbols of unity, such as the Venetian mask, the lion of Saint Mark, and the figure of the doge, reinforced civic identity. Legal protections through the Avogaria de Comun (public prosecutors), established in the late 12th century, ensured justice for commoners and legal representation for the poor. The state also supported infrastructure projects, welfare institutions, and charities, and wealthy nobles were expected to engage in philanthropy without fanfare and provide financial aid to the state during crises.

Venice’s economic allure and social mobility opportunities were, however, arguably the most crucial factors in maintaining stability. Venetian contract law ensured trust and stability in trade. The republic’s vast commerce and trade networks and position as a vital connector between the East and the West offered opportunities to commoners rarely found elsewhere.

While they suffered more during conflicts, famines, and plagues, the diverse composition of the popolani made it difficult for them to unite around common grievances. Additionally, Venice’s stable governance and potential for social mobility left them better off than those in neighboring city-states and empires. As a result, though commoners were excluded from major political decisions, they accepted their limited role, trusting in the fairness and accountability of Venice’s governing class, institutions, and rule of law.

Within the city, a thriving retail sector and diverse economic opportunities complemented a strong manufacturing base. Venice became a leader in shipbuilding, wool and silk cloth production, and glassmaking, attracting talent and investment. Commoners could also join merchant guilds and trade associations along with cittadini, gaining modest political representation and participation in collective decision-making. In later centuries, Venice evolved into a hub of printing and intellectual life, eventually becoming a center for culture and leisure, renowned for its prestige as a museum city. Venice’s economic adaptability, driven by both patricians and the merchant class, was key to Venice’s sustained prosperity, driving innovation and supporting the city’s ability to respond to shifting trade and political dynamics.

Military Strength, Foreign Holdings, and Diplomacy

But Venice’s survival and success also came from its military strength. Surrounded by larger states, its central hub in the Venetian Lagoon provided a defensible core for its navy. The state-owned Arsenal, a pioneering shipyard, and private enterprises enabled the mass production of ships, blending commerce and defense. Merchant ships were often fitted for combat, doubling as warships to protect trade routes, while military expeditions were self-sustaining through trade conducted en route. Boasting the strongest navy in Europe, Venice compensated for its limited land power by employing professional mercenaries and condottieri (or military commanders).

The republic avoided overextension, focusing on maintaining positive relations with its limited territories. Mainland cities enjoyed considerable autonomy, with several independent city-states voluntarily joining the republic. During the War of Cambrai (1508 to 1516), Venice contemplated ceding mainland territories, but revolts in occupied cities in support of Venice helped drive out invaders.

At its height in the 16th century, Venice’s dogado around the lagoon housed approximately 150,000 inhabitants, with its wider territories encompassing 2.3 million people. The Domini da Tera administered mainland Italy, while the Domini da Mar governed overseas colonies. Venetian military officials, like their political counterparts, were rotated regularly to avoid power accumulation and provide numerous nobles with administrative and military experience.

Revolts in Crete against Venetian rule exposed governance flaws in its territories, but efforts to promote greater equality between Venetian settlers and local populations eventually brought peace and showcased Venice’s adaptability in managing overseas territories.

Venice also maintained its independence through skilled diplomacy and a calculated focus on the balance of power. Supported by an expansive network of spies, diplomats, and agents, the small republic successfully navigated challenges from larger, powerful rivals, including Byzantium, the Carolingians, the Holy Roman Empire, the Ottomans, France, and Spain. An early strategic alliance with Byzantium secured access to key ports, while ties with Rome and trade posts as far as China reinforced its position as a reliable trading partner and intermediary. Ties with entities like the Hanseatic League (a trading network) further expanded Venice’s global reach.

Even during its economic decline, Venice played a powerful diplomatic role. Several Venetian popes were elected from the 1400s to 1700s, and Venetian diplomat Alvise Contarini played a crucial role in mediating the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, ending the Thirty Years’ War.

Steady Decline

The seeds of Venice’s decline were nonetheless sown early into its foreign expansion. The Fourth Crusade in 1204 enriched Venice and expanded its territories but strained its relations with Eastern Orthodoxy. The smaller, weakened Byzantine Empire, restored after the crusade, could not withstand the rising Ottoman Empire, whose conquest of Constantinople in 1453 disrupted Venice’s critical eastern trading routes. Venice maintained a strong presence in the Mediterranean, but logistical challenges, heavier taxation, and growing Ottoman competition gradually pushed it into a defensive retreat.

In 1492, Spain’s accidental arrival in the Americas marked a shift in global trade and the need for larger, ocean-bound ships. Venice’s lack of access to the Atlantic, which would fuel later European empires, was soon compounded by the Portuguese voyage to India via Africa in 1498, further undercutting its trade with the East. Venetians later established footholds in cities like Paris, London, and the Low Countries to collaborate with the rapidly growing Atlantic powers, but they struggled to keep pace.

The city’s preference for autonomy left it isolated in a rapidly changing European geopolitical landscape. While Venice’s early history of isolationism gave way to expansion, the city reverted to a more defensive and conservative isolationism in a world dominated by global powers. Repeated outbreaks of plague, particularly in 1575 to 1577 and 1630 to 1631, devastated Venice’s population and weakened its economic and military foundation.

By the 17th century, Venice’s once-adaptative nobles and political system had come to resist reform. Venice’s oligarchic social and political structure, as noted by historian John Norwich, had become rigid and highly corrupt. The nobility, formerly active merchants, had become passive investors, landowners, or city administrators. Destitute aristocrats could no longer sustain their privileges, weakening both their status and the socio-political hierarchy. Political activists, inspired by French Jacobin ideals and Italian nationalism, became increasingly vocal.

Venice’s system had also arguably become too outdated by the 18th century. Nation-states and the modern concept of nationalism simply overwhelmed merchant republics in demographics, territory, and wealth. Napoleon’s revolutionary changes in both warfare and social systems allowed the French military to take Venice without a fight. The Great Council then voted itself out of existence, and France transferred the region to Austria, which shifted the center of the regional government to Milan and prioritized nearby Triest as a port instead. Venice was later incorporated into Italy in 1866, which it has remained part of ever since.

Venice’s Strengths and Other Former Republics

Other Italian city-state republics also achieved prominence. Florence flourished with its banking sector, textile industry, and legal protections afforded to its citizens. Lucca maintained independence longer than Venice, while Pisa and Siena enjoyed periods of prominence. Genoa emerged as a significant maritime power, rivaling Venice for centuries.

However, Florence shifted to hereditary and dynastic rule under the Medici family in the 16th century and conquered Pisa and Siena. Lucca lacked Venice’s scale and influence, while Genoa, despite its strengths, struggled with internal tensions. Merchants and aristocrats were often at odds, as were rival noble clans who reverted to warring among themselves during peacetime. This instability often required foreign mediation, gradually eroding Genoa’s autonomy, while its later alliance with Spain further subordinated Genoa’s independence.

In contrast, Venice managed to avoid conquest, retaining its republican system, political autonomy, and global significance long after many of its counterparts had faded or been absorbed. Even centuries after its fall, no other Italian republic holds the same mystique of Venice. The city’s cultural impact alone was immense, producing creative figures like Tintoretto, Antonio Vivaldi, and Giovanni Bellini, and attracting Andrea Palladio and Titian. Its architectural beauty, set against the lagoon and emulating Roman styles, remains an international draw. Venice’s maintenance and adaptation of Greek and Roman political influences created a system that lasted centuries, which though weakened by the time of French conquest, may have had the potential to rebound.

Venice’s independence movement, which has accelerated since 2014, is unlikely to achieve secession due to significant barriers, including the constraints of Italy’s constitution, lack of international recognition, and disputes over the territorial feasibility of such a split.

The city’s modern economy is driven by tourism, with more than 5.7 million visitors in 2023. Other Italian city-states survive in their own ways: Genoa revived as a key port city in the 1800s and remains so today. The Grimaldi family, originally from Genoa, meanwhile, seized control of Monaco in 1297 and has ruled the country ever since. San Marino, a city-state republic with a claim to a 1700-year-old history, successfully diplomatically negotiated its independence in 301 AD.

Other republics outside Italy emerged during Venice’s time but struggled to endure. The Novgorod Republic established in 1136 in modern Russia, thrived on trade and featured a large assembly, term limits, and checks on elite power. However, its lack of a strong military left it vulnerable, and Moscow captured it in 1478.

The Dutch Republic, established in 1588, decentralized government between provinces and the States General for shared decision-making. It prioritized legal protections, religious tolerance, trade, literacy, and social mobility, though the Dutch East and West India companies undermined republican ideals through colonization and slavery. In 1795, the Dutch Republic fell to France and was replaced by the centralized Batavian Republic, which struggled with regionalism and reliance and dominance by France. By 1810, it became a French-controlled monarchy, until Dutch independence in 1813 reintroduced a monarchy that persists today.

Modern Republican Rule

Modern republics remain young and show a range of adaptations. Parliamentary republics rely on coalition-building, but this risks marginalizing even the most popular parties. Votes of confidence can swiftly remove leaders, but shorter political terms can lead to prioritizing short-term visions. Presidential systems can, meanwhile, run the risk of autocracy, particularly with longer-term limits and incumbency advantage. Other challenges include promoting democratic participation without runaway populism, balancing decentralization and centralization, creating effective political bodies without needless bureaucracy, and striving for peace while remaining prepared for conflict.

Switzerland stands out for its sustained stability, avoiding revolution, occupation, or imperialism since its unification in 1848. It combines regional and international autonomy, open trade, and its role as a global financial and diplomatic hub. Seasonal canton voting embodies direct democracy and encourages citizen participation. However, universal suffrage faces resistance tied to immigration, with referendums on non-citizen voting rights from 1992 to 2016 struggling in areas with higher foreign populations, reflecting concerns over integration and “over-foreignization” in the country.

Singapore, an independent city-state republic since 1965, has thrived and maintained its autonomy by emerging as a trade hub, balancing Cold War powers and rising U.S.-China tensions over the last 20 years. Despite its nominally democratic and republican system, governance has remained centralized under the People’s Action Party, dominated by Lee Kuan Yew’s family and close allies.

The Need for Greater Corporate Accountability

The discussion of decentralized leadership should extend beyond nations to the private sector. Early corporations like the British East India Company, as well as modern constitutional republics, were modeled on medieval chartered towns that were given powers to legislate, imprison, and wage conflicts.

Modern multinational corporations operate globally, influencing markets, negotiating with governments, and increasingly having access to armed forces. Their growing autonomy has led to efforts to link corporate governance with civic responsibility, including proposals to replace the hijacked democratic “one share, one vote” system that has allowed major shareholders to consolidate power and exploit corporate governance in recent decades.

The likelihood of self-imposed corporate accountability is low. However, introducing more layered governance with checks and balances could improve oversight, as private governing entities continue to evolve. Increasing experimentation with private cities globally signals a resurgence of corporate governance, seen more than a century ago in the U.S. with company towns. Similarly, Próspera, a private charter city on Roatán Island in Honduras, is run by a U.S. corporation with a proclaimed commitment to libertarian ideals.

It’s important to view the workers and communities these corporations interact with as similar to state subjects. The growth of corporate power challenges the classical liberal idea that contracts between companies and workers should be free of authority. Republican-style corporate leadership in such projects could address concerns about civic participation, autocracy, and the rule of law.

Venice’s Lessons for Modern Democracies

Many factors contributed to Venice’s success: expansive trade networks, social mobility, technological innovation, geographic advantages, military power, and diplomatic prowess. These elements were mutually reinforcing, underpinned by political stability achieved through distributing authority across collaborative bodies. While Venice’s oligarchy compromised the non-hereditary ideal of republicanism, it effectively prevented dynasties and upheld the principle of power distribution. The public largely trusted the nobles, though the exclusive nature of the noble class contributed to their decline in later centuries.

Venice’s political evolution and trajectory are a priceless repository of history for modern democracies to study. The presence of a non-hereditary figure like the doge provided a unifying focal point for governance, helping to anchor symbolic authority and reduce factionalism. A commitment to checks and balances allowed for a balanced distribution of power. Economic opportunities were cultivated by elites and merchant classes and embraced by the commoners, driving Venice’s prosperity and social mobility. Its ability to continuously adapt its political and economic systems was similarly a major reason for its long-term survival.

Today, frequent power and public opinion shifts, coupled with the influence of wealth and corporations, are fueling instability and gridlock, undermining the long-term effectiveness of democratic institutions. History shows that democratic societies have voted to unintentionally dismantle their own democratic and republican systems, and contemporary voters have often turned to populism and autocracy in the 21st century out of frustration.

But how much power should rest with individuals? Governance could be strengthened by withholding our tendency to center authority in people and instead placing it into political bodies. Venice’s system, for all its strengths, failed to create a fully open, meritocratic system, but its emphasis on collaborative bodies within a professional political class is something modern democracies may need to reconsider. Had Venice’s republican system continued to adapt rather than become increasingly rigid, it may have endured to this day.

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This article was produced by Human Bridges.

Cover Image, Top Left: Painting of historic Venice by Canaletto. Public Domain, Wikimedia Commons

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Major hoard of Roman-British coins found near Utrecht (the Netherlands)

Rijksmuseum van Oudheden—In the autumn of 2023, 404 silver and gold coins dating back to the start of the Common Era were found in the Dutch municipality of Bunnik, not far from Utrecht. The find contains a unique combination of Roman and British coins, buried in the northern border region of the Roman Empire (the Lower German Limes). At the time, this frontier ran right through what is now the Netherlands. A Roman-British coin hoard of this kind has never been discovered in mainland Europe before. The most recent of the Roman coins were struck in the years 46-47, during the reign of the Emperor Claudius. It was during this period that Roman troops crossed the North Sea to conquer the land they called ‘Britannia’. Forty-four of the gold coins come from what we now call Britain and bear the inscription of the British king Cunobelin. The coins were probably brought to Bunnik after the initial conquests by Roman soldiers returning from Britannia: the Roman coins were their pay, while the British coins were the spoils of war. The coins have been acquired by the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden (the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities) and now form part of its permanent exhibition The Netherlands in Roman Times.

Historical context and interpretations

The discovery of these coins highlights the importance of the Lower German Limes for the Roman invasions of Britannia. Not only was this frontier the site for preparations for the first crossing in the year 43 CE, but it also transpires that Roman troops returned to the mainland via the limes, bringing all kinds of possessions back with them, including British coins.

Roman and British coins

This collection of coins is the largest such find from the Roman period ever made in the Province of Utrecht. In addition, it is the first in mainland Europe to contain a mix of Roman and British coins. Only in Britain has a similar hoard been discovered.

The Utrecht find was discovered in the region of the Roman frontier, but outside the major known Roman sites such as the fort Traiectum (Utrecht) and Ulpia Noviomagus (Nijmegen). They were probably buried in or shortly after 47 CE. The reason remains unknown. They may have been hidden with the idea of digging them up at a later date. Then again, they might have been an offering, perhaps to thank the gods for a safe return from battle.

Gold coins from Britain are called staters. They are not made of pure gold, but of an alloy of gold, silver and copper. They were struck between about 5 and 43 CE, during and shortly after the reign of the British king Cunobelin, and up to the first Roman conquests. Cunobelin’s name appears in Latin on the coins: CVNO[BELINVS].

The Roman coins bear portraits of Roman rulers and emperors. The most recent of these, both silver and gold, bear the portrait of the Emperor Claudius. They were struck in 46-47 CE, around the end of the first Roman conquests in Britain.

A total of 72 gold Roman coins known as aurei (singular: aureus) were found, dating from the period 19 BCE to 47 CE. Two of the gold coins were struck using the same stamp and appear to be unused: they show no signs of wear. The owner apparently received them from a stock of newly minted coins.

Most of the Roman specimens, 288 of them, are silver. These denarii (singular: denarius) were struck between 200 BCE and 47 BC. They include special finds, such as coins from the time of Julius Caesar and one coin featuring Juba, the king of Numidia in northwest Africa (present-day Algeria).

From report to exhibition

The coins were discovered by detectorists Gert-Jan Messelaar and Reinier Koelink. After the find was formally reported to Landscape Heritage Utrecht’s Archaeology Hotline, archaeologist Anton Cruysheer examined the coins. They were then entered into the Portable Antiquities of the Netherlands (PAN) database and professionally cleaned by Restaura, a Heerlen-based restoration firm.

To gain a fuller understanding of the area around the find site and why the coins were buried there, the National Cultural Heritage Agency conducted an excavation, in collaboration with the two finders. Their find, 381 of what turned out to be a hoard of 404 coins, has since been acquired by the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden/National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden. With this the coins became part of the Netherlands’ National Archaeology Collection and available for research. They can now be viewed in the museum’s permanent exhibition The Netherlands in Roman Times. The purchase was co-funded by lottery company VriendenLoterij.

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Part of the complete Roman coin find from Bunnik. Photo and collection © National Museum of Antiquities

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Aureus with Emperor Claudius – obverse | Struck during the reign of Emperor Claudius, from 44 AD.
Photo and collection © National Museum of Antiquities

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Coin of King Juba the First – obverse | Ruler of Numidia (North Africa, present-day Algeria) from 60 to 46 BC. So it is not an official Roman coin. Photo and collection © National Museum of Antiquities

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Stater of King Cunobelinus – obverse | Gold, silver and copper alloy, minted in Britannia around 43 AD. 
Photo and collection © National Museum of Antiquities

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Roman aureus , before and after cleaning | Roman aureus (gold), minted during the time of Emperor Claudius, from 44 AD. before and after cleaning by Restaura. Photo and collection © Restoration studio Restaura

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Field research RCE | Tessa de Groot (middle) and the finders of the Bunnik coin hoard, Reinier Koelink (left) and Gert-Jan Messelaar (right), during the RCE excavation near the find location. Photo and collection © Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

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Article Source: Rijksmuseum van Oudheden news release

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New evidence suggests early human ancestor presence in Eurasia by at least 2 million years ago

Evidence from a site in Romania suggests a hominin presence nearly 2 million years ago. The analysis and dating of multiple cut-marked fossil bones discovered at the site of Grăunceanu in Romania by a team of scientists indicates they were produced by stone tools used by hominins more than 1.95 million years ago. The team used biostratigraphic and high-resolution U-Pb dating to determine the age of the activity. Given the finding within the context of sites showing other deep-time ephemeral traces of hominin activity over a widespread geographic area of Eurasia, the “results, presented along multiple other lines of evidence, point to a widespread, though perhaps intermittent, presence of hominins across Eurasia by at least 2.0 Ma,” writes the co-authors of the recently published study.*

The oldest known actual hominin fossils in Eurasia were discovered at the the site of Dmanisi, Georgia,beginning in 1991.

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Sites shown in blue text are suggested to be > 2 Ma. Inset in the lower left corner shows locations of fossil sites discussed in this study. Citations for fossil localities are provided in Supplementary Data 4. Blank world map data with country borders was drawn from Wikimedia Commons (CC-BY-SA 3.0). Map inset images are drawn from satellite imagery available via Google Earth (GoogleLandsat / CopernicusData SIO, NOAA, U.S. Navy, NGA, GEBCOGeoBasis-DE/BKG ©2009 and GoogleAirbusMaxar TechnologiesCNES / Airbus). CC BY-NC-ND 4.0, from Curran, S.C., Drăgușin, V., Pobiner, B. et al. Hominin presence in Eurasia by at least 1.95 million years ago. Nat Commun 16, 836 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56154-9

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Selected images of high-confidence cut-marked specimens from the Olteţ River Valley assemblage. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0, from Curran, S.C., Drăgușin, V., Pobiner, B. et al. Hominin presence in Eurasia by at least 1.95 million years ago. Nat Commun 16, 836 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56154-9

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*Curran, S.C., Drăgușin, V., Pobiner, B. et al. Hominin presence in Eurasia by at least 1.95 million years ago. Nat Commun 16, 836 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56154-9

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A new chapter in Roman administration: Insights from a late Roman inscription

The Hebrew University of JerusalemArchaeologists have uncovered a rare Tetrarchic boundary stone at the site of Abel Beth Maacah in northern Israel. Originally marking land borders under Roman Emperor Diocletian’s tax reforms, the stone provides insight into ancient land ownership, local settlement patterns, and imperial administrative practices. The discovery* also introduces two previously unknown place names, expanding our understanding of the region’s historical geography and socio-economic landscape.

Archaeologists Prof. Naama Yahalom-Mack and Dr. Nava Panitz-Cohen from the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University, and Prof. Robert Mullins from Azusa Pacific University have uncovered a significant relic of ancient administrative practices during their excavation of the biblical site of Abel Beth Maacah near Metula in northern Israel. The find, which was deciphered by Dr. Avner Ecker and Prof. Uzi Leibner from the Hebrew University is a boundary stone, originally inscribed to delineate agrarian borders between villages during the reign of the Roman Tetrarchy (a short-lived system instituted by the emperor Diocletian in 293 CE to govern the Roman Empire by dividing it between two emperors, the augusti, and their junior colleagues and designated successors, the caesares) and was found in secondary use in a Mamluk-period installation. This basalt slab, etched with a detailed Greek inscription, has provided a wealth of historical insights.

The inscription revealed two previously unknown village names, Tirthas and Golgol, which may correspond to ancient sites identified in the 19th-century Survey of Western Palestine. The slab also mentions an imperial surveyor, or “censitor,” whose name is attested here for the first time. These markers reflect the sweeping tax reforms initiated by Diocletian in the late third century CE, emphasizing the role of land ownership and settlement structures in the economic landscape of the Roman Near East.

“This discovery is a testament to the meticulous administrative re-organization of the Roman Empire during the Tetrarchy,” said Prof. Uzi Leibner. “Finding a boundary stone like this not only sheds light on ancient land ownership and taxation but also provides a tangible connection to the lives of individuals who navigated these complex systems nearly two millennia ago.”

Dr. Avner Ecker added, “What makes this find particularly exciting is the mention of two previously unknown place names and a new imperial surveyor. It underscores how even seemingly small discoveries can dramatically enhance our understanding of the socio-economic and geographic history of the region.”

This discovery adds to a unique corpus of over 20 boundary stones concentrated in the northern Hula Valley and surrounding areas. The stones mark a period of heightened administrative control aimed at standardizing taxation and clarifying land ownership. Remarkably, this specific find highlights the interconnectedness of historical geography, economic policies, and local settlement patterns. Scholars believe the abundance of boundary stones in this region underscores the high concentration of small landholders who operated independently of major urban centers. Interestingly, a contemporaneous rabbinic tradition mentions a burden imposed by the emperor Diocletian on this specific area, and apparently also reflects the hardships the tax reform drew on the local population.  

The find enriches our understanding of the socio-economic dynamics during the Tetrarchy, particularly the implications of Diocletian’s reforms on rural communities. Prof. Leibner and Dr. Ecker emphasize that such discoveries provide a unique glimpse into the lives of ancient inhabitants, the pressures they faced under imperial rule, and the enduring traces of their communities in the archaeological record. This exceptional artifact now joins the broader narrative of Roman imperial administration in the Levant.

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An Iron Age citadel and Mamluk-period installation in which the inscription was incorporated in secondary use (courtesy of the Tel Abel Beth Maacah excavations. Photo: Robert Mullins). (courtesy of the Tel Abel Beth Maacah excavations. Photo: Robert Mullins).

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Aerial view of Abel Bet Maacah looking south-east (courtesy of the Tel Abel Beth Maacah excavations. Photo: Robert Mullins). (courtesy of the Tel Abel Beth Maacah excavations. Photo: Robert Mullins).

How Archaeologists Can Solve the Earth’s ‘Wicked Problems’

John Schofield is a professor of archaeology at the University of York, United Kingdom, and the author of the new book Wicked Problems for Archaeologists: Heritage as Transformative Practice (Oxford University Press, 2024).

We used to have “balloon” debates in school: The hot-air balloon is losing height and, to avoid disaster, people must be jettisoned. To avoid this fate, everybody must justify why they should remain on board and their classmates then vote them “on” or “off.”

In reality, the result was determined entirely by one’s popularity. But perhaps this is always the case. In seeking to avoid funding cuts, for example, museums or cultural services are often considered easy targets, since archaeologists and heritage professionals are far less useful than doctors, engineers, or mathematicians. Beyond archaeology itself, cultural heritage has few friends, one might argue.

But I present the argument that far from being the irrelevant or outdated subject some politicians, career advisers, and university leaders might consider it to be, archaeology is essential to the future of humanity and planetary health. This is for three main reasons. First, archaeologists have the capacity to think about and to understand humanity of the past, and to project that insight into the future. Second, archaeologists are uniquely placed to comprehend the many and complex ways in which humans, over time, have related to their environment and environmental and other processes, such as the changing climate, migration, or pandemics. And third, archaeology provides opportunities for everyone to benefit, whether in terms of physical (by undertaking surveys or excavations) or mental health (through social interaction or artifact handling, to address loneliness or anxiety, for example).

York Archaeology’s Archaeology on Prescription project is one example of this: The program enables adults facing various conditions to gain a detailed understanding of life in a specific area of York, and in the process to improve their health and well-being, on top of volunteerism’s generally positive health effects, as demonstrated by a 2024 article.

In my new book, Wicked Problems for Archaeologists, I examine a few creative ways that we can use archaeology to help directly address some of the global challenges that threaten both human and planetary health. The book’s main argument is that as archaeologists we need to stop thinking only about the past and also think about the future. We also need to engage more with policymakers to help them address their challenges and opportunities.

Wicked Problems

Wicked problems emerged from research in the late 1960s to devise ways of using outcomes from the United States’ NASA-funded space program to help resolve urban problems such as crime and poverty. The definition of wicked problems as those that are “complex, intractable, open-ended, and unpredictable” captures both the scale of these problems and the difficulties they entail. We also now have “super-wicked problems” that introduce the additional dimension of time (or the lack of time to be precise). Super-wicked problems are in addition to the original 10 characteristics of wicked problems, defined by Horst W.J. Rittel and Melvin M. Webber:

  1. Time is running out;
  2. There is no central authority, or only a weak authority, to manage the problem; and
  3. The same actors causing the problem are required to help solve it.

Both climate change and environmental pollution are examples of super-wicked problems in which archaeologists have recently become involved, including my own work in the Galápagos and the wider South Pacific region. Social injustice, crime, and conflict are widely used as examples of wicked problems.

Small Wins

I suggest that the only realistic way to achieve success with wicked and super-wicked problems, and ultimately to make a difference, is by adopting a small-wins framework. These small wins (also referred to as small gains or nudges) align well with what universities in the UK refer to as impact, which, for the purposes of the UK’s Research Excellence Framework is defined as, “an effect on, change or benefit to the economy, society, culture, public policy or services, health, the environment or quality of life, beyond academia.” Small wins have been defined by theorist Karl Weick as, “a series of concrete, complete outcomes of moderate importance [that] builds a pattern that attracts allies and deters opponents.” The strategy of small wins incorporates sound psychology and is sensitive to the pragmatics of policymaking. Examples of small wins include the plastic pollution work in the Galápagos and neighboring coastal South America, and the Archaeology on Prescription project, referred to previously.

But even with small wins, we need to be careful. Wicked problems are deeply entangled with one another, meaning that any solution to one problem may exacerbate other problems elsewhere. Climate change and social injustice are a well-known example of this entanglement.

Promoting Success

Once small wins have been achieved, as archaeologists, we need to tell influential people about the outcomes so that our museums and galleries, local services, and archaeology departments are not threatened with closure by people who fail to understand the significance (or the potential) of the work we do.

For this conversation to happen, we need spokespeople who are good at communicating and have access to data and projects that deserve to be talked about. Archaeology needs influencers, or policy entrepreneurs as they are sometimes referred to. As archaeologists, we have not always been very good at this. It is probably why climate scientists on the IPCC don’t take much notice of us.

Preparing Archaeologists for a Wicked Future

We also need to think about how we manage people, resources, and priorities within our profession and how we prepare students for wicked futures. Management leadership scholar Keith Grint has explained how, across disciplines, academics need to be collaborative and passionate leaders inspiring an even more collaborative and passionate next generation. These, he thinks, are essential qualities for creating structures conducive to successfully addressing wicked problems.

We should also be looking to create (and teach our students to prepare for) some entirely new business models that provide the foundations for success: for example, new board structures that provide opportunities for younger people. Often advisory boards and boards of trustees are composed of older people with more experience. Younger idealists are often not welcome because they lack real-world experience. But for a world of wicked problems, we need to be much more creative. The old ways have not worked, so we need to try some new ones.

The Council for British Archaeology’s Youth Advisory Board is an excellent example of what can be done easily and immediately. And as archaeologists, we must continue to teach students how to find, research, interpret, and conserve the places and the materials from which we create an understanding of the past and its relevance in the present. These skills are fundamental to archaeology. But we need to go further.

To ensure that the relevance of archaeology is widely felt, students also need to learn how to communicate with non-specialists. To engage with wicked problems they must also learn about global challenges, and activism, and think more about the future. We need to produce what Paul Handstedt calls “wicked students.”

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This article was produced by Human Bridges.

Cover Image, Top Left: NickyPe, Pixabay

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Three million years ago, our ancestors were vegetarian

University of the Witwatersrand—Human ancestors like Australopithecus – which lived around 3.5 million years ago in southern Africa – ate very little to no meat, according to new research* published in the scientific journal Science. This conclusion comes from an analysis of nitrogen isotope isotopes in the fossilized tooth enamel of seven Australopithecus individuals. The data revealed that these early hominins primarily relied on plant-based diets, with little to no evidence of meat consumption.

The consumption of animal resources, especially meat, is considered a crucial turning point in human evolution. This protein-rich food has been linked to the increase in brain volume and the ability to develop tools. However, direct evidence of when meat emerged among our early ancestors, and of how its consumption developed though time, has been elusive. A team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Germany and the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa (Wits University) now provide evidence that human ancestors of the genus Australopithecus that lived in southern Africa between 3.7 and 3.3 million years ago subsisted mostly on plants. 

The research team analyzed stable isotope data from tooth enamel of Australopithecus individuals found in the Sterkfontein cave near Johannesburg, part of South Africa’s “Cradle of Humankind”, an area known for its rich collection of early hominin fossilsThey compared the isotopic data of Australopithecus with that from tooth samples of coexisting animals, including monkeys, antelopes, and large predators such as hyenas, jackals, and big cats.

Tooth enamel preserved dietary signatures

“Tooth enamel is the hardest tissue of the mammalian body and can preserve the isotopic fingerprint of an animal’s diet for millions of years,” says geochemist Tina Lüdecke, lead author of the study. Lüdecke has led the “Emmy-Noether Junior Research Group for Hominin Meat Consumption” at the Mainz-based Max Planck Institute for Chemistry since 2021 and is an Honorary Research Fellow at the Evolutionary Studies Institute of the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. She regularly travels to Africa to sample fossilized teeth for her analysis. Wits University owns the Sterkfontein Caves and is the custodian of the Australopithecus fossils.

When animals digest food, biochemical reactions favor the “light” isotope of nitrogen (14N). Consequently, the degradation products that are produced in their body contain high proportions of 14N. The excretion of these “light” nitrogen compounds in urine, feces, or sweat increases the ratio of “heavy” nitrogen (15N) to this “light” nitrogen the body in comparison to the food it eats. This means that herbivores have a higher nitrogen isotope ratio than the plants they consume, while carnivores in turn have a higher nitrogen isotope ratio than their prey. Therefore, the higher the 15N to 14N ratio in a tissue sample, the higher is the trophic position of the organism in the food web.

Nitrogen isotope ratios have long been used to study the diets of modern animals and humans in hair, claws, bones and many other organic materials. However, in fossil material, these measurements have previously been limited to samples that are only a few tens of thousands of years old due to the degradation of organic material over time. In this study, Tina Lüdecke used a novel technique developed in Alfredo Martínez-García’s laboratory at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, to measure nitrogen isotopes ratios in fossilized tooth enamel that is millions of years old. 

Evidence of mostly plant-based food

The team of researchers found that the nitrogen isotope ratios in the tooth enamel of Australopithecus varied, but were consistently low, similar to those of herbivores, and much lower than those of contemporary carnivores. They conclude that the diet of these hominins was variable but consisted largely or exclusively of plant-based food. Therefore, Australopithecus did not regularly hunt large mammals like, for example, the Neanderthals did a few million years later. While the researchers cannot completely rule out the possibility of occasional consumption of animal protein sources like eggs or termites, the evidence indicates a diet that was predominantly vegetarian.

Further research on fossilized tooth enamel

Lüdecke’s team plans to expand their research, collecting more data from different hominin species and time periods. They aim to examine fossils from other key sites in eastern and southern Africa as well as southeast Asia to explore when meat consumption began, how it evolved, and whether it provided an evolutionary advantage for our ancestors.

“This method opens up exciting possibilities for understanding human evolution, and it has the potential to answer crucial questions, for example, when did our ancestors begin to incorporate meat in their diet? And was the onset of meat consumption linked to an increase in brain volume?” says Alfredo Martínez-García, from the Max Planck institute for Chemistry.

“This work represents a huge step in extending our ability to better understand diets and trophic level of all animals back into the scale of millions of years. The research provides clear evidence that its diet did not contain significant amounts of meat. We are honored that the pioneering application of this new method was spearheaded at Sterkfontein, a site that continues to make fundamental contributions to science even 89 years after the first hominin fossils were discovered there by Robert Broom,” says Professor Dominic Stratford, Director of Research at the Sterkfontein Caves and co-author of the paper. 

The study was funded by the Max Planck Society. Tina Lüdecke’s research group is supported by the Emmy Noether program of the German Research Foundation (DFG). 

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Hand-drawn illustration of two of the seven sampled molars from Australopithecus. Dom Jack, MPIC

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The Sterkfontein excavation site, which exposes the ancient deposits that once formed underground and contain Australopithecus fossils. The fossil-bearing red sediments clearly contrast with the grey dolomite of the cave walls and remnant roof of the chamber. Dominic Stratford

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Tina Lüdecke stands beside “Little Foot,” a remarkably well-preserved skeleton of Australopithecus discovered in the Sterkfontein Cave, celebrated as the most complete pre-human skeleton ever found. In her research, however, Lüdecke and her team primarily work with isolated fossilized tooth fragments. Bernhard Zipfel/Wits University

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Article Source: University of the Witwatersrand news release

Volcanic eruption caused Neolithic people to sacrifice unique “sun stones”

University of Copenhagen – Faculty of Humanities—Throughout history, volcanic eruptions have had serious consequences for human societies such as cold weather, lack of sun, and low crop yields. In the year 43 BC when a volcano in Alaska spewed large quantities of sulphur into the stratosphere, harvests failed the following years in the countries around the Mediterranean, causing famine and disease. This is well-documented in written sources from ancient Greece and Rome. 

We do not have written sources from the Neolithic. But climate scientists from the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen have analyzed ice cores from the Greenland ice sheet and can now document that around 2,900 BC a similar volcanic eruption took place. An eruption that must have had equally devastating consequences for the Neolithic peoples who lived in Northern Europe at the time and who were deeply dependent on agriculture.  

This new insight into a climate episode in the Neolithic period has led archaeologists from the University of Copenhagen, the National Museum of Denmark and the Museum of Bornholm to view their findings of so-called “sun stones” from the Neolithic Vasagård site on Bornholm in a new light, and they have just published a scientific article on the phenomenon in the journal Antiquity:

“We have known for a long time that the sun was the focal point for the early agricultural cultures we know of in Northern Europe. They farmed the land and depended on the sun to bring home the harvest. If the sun almost disappeared due to mist in the stratosphere for longer periods of time, it would have been extremely frightening for them,” says archaeologist Rune Iversen from the University of Copenhagen, who has participated in the excavations at the site led by the Museum of Bornholm and the National Museum. He adds:  

“One type of find that is completely unique to Bornholm is the so-called sun stones, which are flat shale pieces with engraved patterns and sun motifs. They symbolized fertility and were probably sacrificed to ensure sun and growth. Sun stones were found in large quantities at the Vasagård West site, where residents deposited them in ditches forming part of a causewayed enclosure together with the remains of ritual feasts in the form of animal bones, broken clay vessels, and flint objects around 2,900 BC. The ditches were subsequently closed.”   

Rune Iversen and his colleagues believe that there is a very high probability that there is a connection between the volcanic eruption, the subsequent climate changes and the discovery of the ritual sun stone sacrifices.

“It is reasonable to believe that the Neolithic people on Bornholm wanted to protect themselves from further deterioration of the climate by sacrificing sun stones – or perhaps they wanted to show their gratitude that the sun had returned again.”

Major cultural changes
As if an acute climate deterioration around 2,900 BC was not enough, Northern European Neolithic cultures were also affected by other disasters; New DNA studies of human bones have shown that the plague was very widespread and fatal.

During the same period when the Neolithic people were affected by both climate change and disease, archaeologists can also document a shift in the traditions they had held on to for a long time. The so-called Funnel Beaker Culture, which had been dominant until about 5,000 years ago with its characteristic ceramics and passage graves, was gradually disappearing. 

“At the causewayed enclosure we have excavated on Bornholm, we can also see that, after the sacrifice of the sun stones, the residents changed the structure of the site so that instead of sacrificial ditches it was provided with extensive rows of palisades and circular cult houses. We do not know why, but it is reasonable to believe that the dramatic climatic changes they had been exposed to would have played a role in some way, Rune Iversen concludes.   

Sun stones to be exhibited in Copenhagen
Four of the sun stones from Vasagård on Bornholm can be experienced from 28 January in the prehistoric exhibition at The National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen. They probably exemplify one of the earliest depositional practices connected to a Neolithic sun-cult in South Scandinavia, which are also known from the Nordic Bronze Age with objects like the sun chariot.

“The sunstones are completely unique, also in a European context. The closest we get to a similar sun-cult in the Neolithic is some passage graves in southern Scandinavia or henge structures like Stonehenge in England, which some researchers associate with the sun. With the sun stones, there is in my mind no doubt. It is quite simply an incredible discovery, which demonstrates that depositions honoring the sun is an ancient phenomenon, which we encounter again in South Scandinavia during the climate disaster caused by a volcanic eruption in the year 536 AD, where several large gold hoards were deposited as sacrifices,” says Lasse Vilien Sørensen, who is senior researcher at The National Museum of Denmark and co-author of the research paper.

Volcanic eruption 2,900 BC
The researchers can document reduced radiation from the sun and consequent cooling, which can be traced in both the United States and Europe around 2,900 BC. 

Dendrochronological analyses of fossil wood show signs of frost in the spring and summer months both before and after 2,900 BC.

And ice cores from the Greenland ice cap and the Antarctica contain sulphur, which is a sign of the occurrence of a strong volcanic eruption.

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Two so-called sun stones, which are small flat shale pieces with finely incised patterns and sun motifs. They are known only from the island of Bornholm in the Baltic Sea. National Museum of Denmark

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The archaeological site Vasagård is located on Bornholm in the Baltic Sea. University of Copenhagen

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Article Source: University of Copenhagen – Faculty of Humanities news release

Human ancestor thrived longer in harsher conditions than previous estimates

Griffith University—An early human ancestor of our species successfully navigated harsher and more arid terrains for longer in Eastern Africa than previously thought, according to a new study published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment.

Homo erectus, the first of our relatives to have human-like proportions and the first known early human to migrate out of Africa, was the focus of the new study led by the international research team.

The researchers analyzed evidence from Engaji Nanyori in Tanzania’s Oldupai Gorge, revealing Homo erectus thrived in hyper-arid landscapes one million years ago – well before our species, Homo sapiens, emerged.

“Now extinct, Homo erectus existed more than an estimated 1.5 million years, marking them as a species survival success in the human evolution story when compared with our own estimated existence of around 300,000 years to date,” Professor Michael Petraglia said, Director of the Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution, Griffith University.

“That success came down to their ability to survive over a long period marked by many changes to the environment and climate,” noted the lead author, Professor Julio Mercader of the University of Calgary.

Using biogeochemical analyses, chronometric dating, palaeoclimate simulations, biome modelling, fire history reconstructions, palaeobotanical studies, faunal assemblages, and archaeological evidence, the research team reconstructed an environment dominated by semidesert shrubland.

Despite the challenges of these conditions, Homo erectus repeatedly occupied landscapes created by rivers and streams, leveraging water sources and ecological focal points to mitigate risk.

These findings suggest archaic humans possessed an ecological flexibility previously attributed only to later hominins.

“Debate has long centred on when the genus Homo acquired the adaptability to thrive in extreme environments such as deserts and rainforests,” said Dr Abel Shikoni of the University of Dodoma, Tanzania.

“Traditionally, only Homo sapiens was thought capable of sustained occupation in such ecosystems, with archaic hominins seen as restricted to narrower ranges”.

“However, the biogeochemical, palaeoenvironmental, and archaeological evidence we analysed suggests early Homo had the ability to adapt to diverse and unstable environments from the East African Rift floor and Afromontane areas as early as two million years ago,” Professor Petraglia said.

“This adaptive profile, marked by resilience in arid zones, challenges assumptions about early hominin dispersal limits and positions Homo erectus as a versatile generalist and the first hominin to transcend environmental boundaries on a global scale.”

“This adaptability likely facilitated the expansion of Homo erectus into the arid regions of Africa and Eurasia, redefining their role as ecological generalists thriving in some of the most challenging landscapes of the Middle Pleistocene,” said Professor Paul Durkin of the University of Manitoba.

The study Homo erectus adapted to steppe-desert climate extremes one million years ago has been published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment.

Ancient genomes reveal an Iron Age society centered on women

Trinity College Dublin—An international team of geneticists, led by those from Trinity College Dublin, has joined forces with archaeologists from Bournemouth University to decipher the structure of British Iron Age society, finding evidence of female political and social empowerment.  

The researchers seized upon a rare opportunity to sequence DNA from many members of a single community. They retrieved over 50 ancient genomes from a set of burial grounds in Dorset, southern England, in use before and after the Roman Conquest of AD 43. The results revealed that this community was centered around bonds of female-line descent. 

Dr Lara Cassidy, Assistant Professor in Trinity’s Department of Genetics, led the study* that has been published in the leading international journal Nature today. She said: “This was the cemetery of a large kin group. We reconstructed a family tree with many different branches and found most members traced their maternal lineage back to a single woman, who would have lived centuries before. In contrast, relationships through the father’s line were almost absent.

“This tells us that husbands moved to join their wives’ communities upon marriage, with land potentially passed down through the female line. This is the first time this type of system has been documented in European prehistory and it predicts female social and political empowerment. 

“It’s relatively rare in modern societies, but this might not always have been the case.”

Incredibly, the team found that this type of social organization, termed “matrilocality”, was not just restricted to Dorset. They sifted through data from prior genetic surveys of Iron Age Britain and, although sample numbers from other cemeteries were smaller, they saw the same pattern emerge again and again.

Dan Bradley, Professor of Population Genetics in Trinity’s Department of Genetics, and a co-author of the study, added: “Across Britain we saw cemeteries where most individuals were maternally descended from a small set of female ancestors. In Yorkshire, for example, one dominant matriline had been established before 400 BC. To our surprise, this was a widespread phenomenon with deep roots on the island.” 

Iron Age cemeteries with well-preserved burials are rare in Britain. Dorset is an exception, due to the unique burial customs of the people who lived there, named as the “Durotriges” by the Romans. The researchers sampled DNA from a site near the village of Winterborne Kingston, nicknamed “Duropolis”, which archaeologists from Bournemouth University have been excavating since 2009. Previously, the team had observed the more richly furnished Durotrigan burials to be those of women. 

Dr Miles Russell, the excavation’s director and co-author on the study, commented: “Beyond archaeology, knowledge of Iron Age Britain has come primarily from the Greek and Roman writers, but they are not always considered the most trustworthy. That said, their commentary on British women is remarkable in light of these findings. When the Romans arrived, they were astonished to find women occupying positions of power. Two of the earliest recorded rulers were queens – Boudica and Cartimandua – who commanded armies.

“It’s been suggested that the Romans exaggerated the liberties of British women to paint a picture of an untamed society. But archaeology, and now genetics, implies women were influential in many spheres of Iron Age life. Indeed, it is possible that maternal ancestry was the primary shaper of group identities.”

Anthropologist Dr Martin Smith, one of the project’s bone specialists, added: “These results give us a whole new way of looking at the burials we are uncovering with our students. Rather than simply seeing a set of skeletons, hidden aspects of these people’s lives and identities come into view as mothers, husbands, daughters and so on. We also see these folk had deep knowledge of their own ancestry – multiple marriages between distant branches of this family occurred and were possibly favoured, but close inbreeding was avoided.”

Echoing the writings of Julius Caesar, the researchers further uncovered a footprint of Iron Age migration into coastal southern England, which had gone undetected in prior genetic studies. This will add more fuel to debates surrounding the arrival of Celtic language in Britain. 

Dr Cassidy explained: “Migration into Britain during the later Bronze Age has previously been detected, leading some to hypothesize that Celtic language arrived during this period. But our results point towards substantial cross-channel mobility during the Iron Age as well. Narrowing down the arrival time of Celtic will be difficult. Indeed, it is quite possible that Celtic languages were introduced to Britain on more than one occasion.”

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Durotrigian burial of a young woman from Langton Herring sampled for DNA (c) Bournemouth University. She was buried with a mirror (right panels) and jewellery, including a Roman coin amulet showing a female charioteer representing Victory. Bournemouth University

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Excavating a Late Iron Age Durotriges burial at Winterborne Kingston (c) Bournemouth University. Bournemouth University

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Article Source: Trinity College Dublin news release

Texts to Textiles: Reconstructing Mycenaean textile production through Linear B

In the latest released episode of Dr. Ester Salgarella’s podcast series, Aegean Connections, Marie Louise Nosch, Professor of ancient history at the Saxo Institute, University of Copenhagen, relates the significance of textiles and their production and commerce in the Bronze Age palatial societies of the Mediterranean. She does this by discussing how the reading and analysis of Linear B, the ancient script of the Mycenaean civilization, has revealed a surprising amount of information about the making, trade distribution, business and value of textiles as a prominent part of the economies of societies of the time.

“Textile production was the fuel of the Bronze Age economy”, says Nosch in the podcast interview.

Indeed, at least among the elite in the even earlier Minoan cities like Knossos in Crete and Akrotiri on the island of Santorini, the evidence for the sophistication and importance of textiles for clothing was clearly illustrated in the magnificent frescoes known today among the archaeological remains and collections of those sites.

Nosch also elaborates how Linear B texts have described in detail the stages of textile production, as well as the remarkable standardization and fixed cycles that defined broadly applied expectations in the world of textiles of the Mediterranean Bronze Age.

Readers can listen to much more about this in the newly released, free podcast, Texts and Textiles: reconstructing Mycenaean textile production through Linear B.

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Cover Image, Top Left: Wall painting from the House of the Ladies in Akrotiri. An iconic example of the sophisticated and artful style of clothing made possible by the mastery and production of textiles during the Bronze Age. 

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Popular Archaeology collaborates with Wayfaring Walks to visit ancient Etruscan sites in Italy

Far from the crunch of the madding crowd one typically encounters with the big Italian tourist sites in places like Rome, Florence, Venice, and Naples, a small group of travelers will have the opportunity to explore spectacular off-the-beaten-path sites scattered across the Italian provinces of Umbria and Tuscany. The sites, mostly situated at or near aesthetically scenic and historic Medieval and Etruscan hilltop towns and villages, will define a picture of the Etruscans, the ancient civilization that preceded the Romans. The Etruscans dominated most of the Italian peninsula for centuries, and heavily influenced the culture and character of the civilization that eventually became the Roman Empire.

What distinguishes this tour from most other tours revolves around one human activity — walking. Rather than shuttling large groups of tourists from one congested site after another in chartered buses or vans, this comparatively smaller group will spend the majority of its time hiking across the countryside, taking ancient paths, roads and trails in between up-close-and-personal historic, cultural and archaeological sites that tell the story of the ancient Etruscans as well as the later Medieval and Roman periods.

“Unlike the typical tourist-type experience, this group will be hiking through country that most people, other than the local population, do not see. It will be a more intimate encounter with the landscape and people of ancient and historic Italy,” says Dan McLerran, founder and editor of Popular Archaeology Magazine. “Along with this, the mere act of walking has a profound impact on personal health, both physically and mentally/emotionally. In our mad dash in life to tick off the tasks we have created for ourselves in this life, we forget to ‘smell the flowers’ and nurture closer relationships with others along the way — the very things that make life worth living.”

The trip plan, created and operated by Wayfaring Walks, will take participants to towns that feature ancient and Medieval architecture set high atop rocky, cliff-like formations, as well as anciently-carved and constructed tombs and underground habitations beneath.

“Along with developing new relationships with like-minded people participating in the walk, this will be a photographer’s paradise, so if you are into creating distinctive and artistic images with your camera, this will be an excellent opportunity to do so,” added McLerran.

The towns the group will encounter are among the most scenically picturesque in Italy, affording views not encountered by most vacationing visitors. Moreover, the experience promises to focus on education as well, expanding the participant’s understanding of the ancient and historic cultures encountered.

The walk is open to anyone interested, although individuals who are premium subscribers to Popular Archaeology Magazine will be offered a $500 discount on the trip price (for the first 4 who register). Participants should know that the walking/hiking element of this tour is NOT mandatory. If for any reason a person cannot or does not wish to do some or all of the walk aspect of the tour, arrangements can be made with the tour leader and manager to do limited independent explorations of the towns and sites on the travel itinerary. 

For more information about this, and how to register, go to Etruscan Hilltop Towns at https://www.wayfaringwalks.com/tour/etruscan-hilltop-towns/. For current premium subscribers to Popular Archaeology Magazine, go to https://www.wayfaringwalks.com/welcome-popular-archaeology-subscribers/

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View of Civita Bagnoregio, one of the towns to be visited. Orlando Paride, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, Wikimedia Commons

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Orvieto. Courtesy Wayfaring Walks

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Pozzo di San Patrizio, Orvieto. Courtesy Wayfaring Walks

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Sorano. Courtesy Wayfaring Walks

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The Citta del Tufo Archaeological Park. Courtesy Wayfaring Walks

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Sorano Castle stairs. Courtesy Wayfaring Walks

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Pitigliano, illuminated. Courtesy Wayfaring Walks

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Archaeological team discovers ancient Etruscan ritual pit and votive niche

A team of students led by archaeologist Luca Nejrotti recently unearthed two previously undiscovered features among ancient Etruscan tombs in Tuscany, Italy. During the summer of 2024, in collaboration with the Archaeological Park “Città del Tufo”, the team, consisting of archaeologists, students and local volunteers, revisited six Etruscan tombs nestled for more than 2500 years within the area known as the Via Cava di San Sebastiano, near the town of Solano.

The team revisited a number of 7th – 6th century BC tombs carved anciently into the area’s characteristic volcanic tufa rock, already explored and exposed by Roman looting and 19th and 20th century digging. At the end of their season, they uncovered two previously unknown features left untouched for more than 2500 years — a ritual pit and a funerary niche. The ritual pit contained a double-handled bowl and four dishes, and the funerary niche, sealed with terra-cotta tiles, revealed nine ceramic vessels, spindle whorls, and a bronze fragment.

According to lead archaeologist Nejrotti, the finds “represent an exceptional testimony to the religious practices associated with funerary offerings”.  

Although the details of ancient Etruscan religious practices and culture are not as well known as those of the ancient Greeks and Romans, their tombs have revealed the significance of religious beliefs and practices in their society.

The Etruscans were an ancient people who preceded the Romans and inhabited current day central Italy from around 900 BC to roughly 100 BC. They possessed a common language and culture but governed themselves independently through federations of city-states (three confederacies in all: Etruria (today’s Tuscany, Latium and Umbria), the Po Valley with the eastern Alps, and the area known today as Campania. At its greatest extent, Etruria covered what is now Tuscany, western Umbria, northern Lazio, the Po ValleyEmilia-Romagna, south-eastern Lombardy, southern Veneto, and western Campania.

More about the team’s work and results can be found in the major feature article recently published in the winter 2025 issue of Popular Archaeology Magazine.

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Excavating the ritual pit. Courtesy Luca Nejrotti

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The funerary niche after the removal of the tiles. Courtesy Luca Nejrotti

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Ukraine was a crossroads of human mobility until around 500 years ago

Estonian Research CouncilThe North Pontic region, which encompasses present-day Ukraine, was for centuries a crossroads of migration from multiple directions, connecting the vast Eurasian Steppe with Central Europe.

A study recently published in Science Advances uses ancient human remains to reveal the remarkably high genetic heterogeneity in the region during the last 3,500 years up to around 500 years ago. The study is led by Lehti Saag, a researcher at the University of Tartu Institute of Genomics (UT IG) and a former Marie Skłodowska-Curie postdoctoral fellow at University College London (UCL), alongside professor Mark Thomas from UCL and Pontus Skoglund from the Francis Crick Institute. The study was made possible by the resilience of Ukrainian researchers – second author Olga Utevska who is currently a MSCA4Ukraine fellow at UT IG, and numerous archaeologists still actively conducting excavations in Ukraine despite the war.

The analyses show that at the end of the Bronze Age, broad-scale ancestry proportions are similar to contemporary populations in the rest of Europe – a mixture of European hunter-gatherer, Anatolian early farmer and Steppe pastoralist ancestries – and these ancestry components have been present in the Ukraine region since then until today. However, from the Early Iron Age until the Middle Ages, the appearance of eastern nomads in the Pontic region became a regular occurrence. Their genetic composition varied from Steppe-like superimposed on the locals to high degrees of East Asian ancestry with minimal local admixture.

At the same time, individuals from the rest of the Ukrainian region had ancestry mostly from different regions in Europe. The palimpsest created by migration and population mixing in the Ukraine region will have contributed to the high genetic heterogeneity in geographically, culturally and socially homogeneous groups, with different genetic profiles present at the same site, at the same time and among individuals with the same archaeological association.

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Scythian burial at the Skorobir necropolis in the fortified settlement of Bilski. Iryna Shramko

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Article Source: Estonian Research Council news release.

*North Pontic crossroads: Mobility in Ukraine from the Bronze Age to the early modern period, Science Advances, 8-Jan-2025. 10.1126/sciadv.adr0695 

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Tattoos revealed on mummified skin

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences—Researchers used lasers to reveal highly detailed tattoos on 1,200-year-old mummies from Peru. Mummified human remains from pre-Hispanic South America provide evidence of a long history of tattooing in the region. The ink used in tattoos tends to bleed and fade with age, a process further exacerbated by mummification, rendering the original designs difficult to discern. Michael Pittman and colleagues used laser-stimulated fluorescence to study approximately 1,200-year-old tattoos on mummified individuals belonging to the pre-Columbian Chancay culture in present-day coastal Peru. The authors inspected more than 100 mummified individuals for tattoos. The preserved skin of the mummified individuals fluoresced brightly, in contrast with the black tattoo ink. The resulting high-contrast images virtually eliminated the effects of ink bleed, revealing previously hidden details of the tattoo designs. The complex geometric and zoomorphic patterns were inked with a finely pointed object, possibly a single cactus needle or sharpened animal bone. The authors note that the artistic details and precision of the tattoos exceed that of contemporary Chancay pottery, textiles, and rock art, suggesting that some tattoos were the product of special effort. According to the authors, the findings provide insight into the artistic development and complexity found in pre-Columbian South America.

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1,200-year-old mummified forearm under laser-stimulated fluorescence revealing details of tattoo designs. Michael Pittman and Thomas G Kaye

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1,200-year-old mummified hand featuring tattoos. Michael Pittman and Thomas G Kaye

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Article Source: PNAS news release

*“Hidden artistic complexity of Peru’s Chancay culture discovered in tattoos by laser-stimulated fluorescence,” by Thomas G. Kaye, Judyta Bąk, Henry William Marcelo, and Michael Pittman, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 13-Jan-2025. https://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.2421517122

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When the past meets the future: Innovative drone mapping unlocks secrets of Bronze Age ‘mega fortress’ in the Caucasus

Cranfield University—A Cranfield University, UK, academic has used drone mapping to investigate a 3000-year-old ‘mega fortress’ in the Caucasus mountains. Dr Nathaniel Erb-Satullo, Senior Lecturer in Architectural Science at Cranfield Forensic Institute, has been researching the site since 2018 with Dimitri Jachvliani, his co-director from the Georgian National Museum, revealing details that re-shape our understanding of the site and contribute to a global reassessment of ancient settlement growth and urbanism.

Fortress settlements in the South Caucasus appeared between 1500-500 BCE, and represent an unprecedented development in the prehistory of the regions. Situated at the boundary between Europe, the Eurasian Steppe, and the Middle East, the Caucasus region has a long history as a cultural crossroads with distinctive local identities.  

Research on the fortress – named Dmanisis Gora – began with test excavations on a fortified promontory between two deep gorges. A subsequent visit in Autumn, when the knee-high high summer grasses had died back, revealed that the site was much larger than originally thought. Scattered across a huge area outside the inner fortress were the remains of additional fortification walls and other stone structures. Because of its size, it was impossible to get a sense of the site as a whole from the ground.

“That was what sparked the idea of using a drone to assess the site from the air,” commented Dr Erb-Satullo. “The drone took nearly 11,000 pictures which were knitted together using advanced software to produce high-resolution digital elevation models and orthophotos – composite pictures that show every point as if you were looking straight down.

“These datasets enabled us to identify subtle topographic features and create accurate maps of all the fortification walls, graves, field systems, and other stone structures within the outer settlement. The results of this survey showed that the site was more than 40 times larger than originally thought, including a large outer settlement defended by a 1km long fortification wall.”

The research team used a DJI Phantom 4 RTK drone which can provide relative positional accuracy of under 2cm as well as extremely high-resolution aerial imagery. In order to obtain a highly accurate map of human-made features, the team carefully checked each feature in the aerial imagery to confirm its identification.

To understand how the landscape of the site had evolved, the orthophotos were compared with 50-year-old photos taken by a Cold War-era spy satellite declassified in 2013. That gave researchers much needed insight into which features were recent, which were older. It also enabled researchers to assess what areas of the ancient settlement were damaged by modern agriculture. All of those data sets were merged in Geographic Information System (GIS) software, helping to identify patterns and changes in the landscape.

“The use of drones has allowed us to understand the significance of the site and document it in a way that simply wouldn’t be possible on the ground” said Dr Erb-Satullo. ”Dmanisis Gora isn’t just a significant find for the Southern Caucasus region, but has a broader significance for the diversity in the structure of large scale settlements and their formation processes. We hypothesize that Dmanisis Gora expanded because of its interactions with mobile pastoral groups, and its large outer settlement may have expanded and contracted seasonally. With the site now extensively mapped, further study will start to provide insights into areas such as population density and intensity, livestock movements and agricultural practices, among others.”  

This data will give researchers new insights into Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age societies, and how these communities functioned. Since the aerial survey was completed, Dr. Erb-Satullo has been carrying out further excavations at the site, uncovering tens of thousands of pottery shards, animal bones, and other artefacts that tell us more about the society that built this fortress.

This work* has been funded by the Gerda Henkel Foundation, the Gerald Averay Wainwright Fund and the British Institute at Ankara.

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Atmospheric photo of the site at dusk, showing the location at the convergence of two gorges. 2023 excavations of inner fortress are visible in foreground. Nathaniel Erb-Satullo

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Photo of structures in the outer settlement, 1km long fortification wall is visible in upper left. Nathaniel Erb-Satullo

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Article Source: Cranfield University news release

*MEGA-FORTRESSES IN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS: NEW DATA FROM SOUTHERN GEORGIA, Antiquity, 8-Jan-2025. 10.15184/aqy.2024.197 

Penn Museum’s New Exhibition Preserving Assyria Highlights Restoring Iraq’s Cultural Heritage Through Community-Led Archaeology

PHILADELPHIA, January 7, 2025—In conflict zones like Syria and Ukraine, erasure is a part of systematic genocide and cultural cleansing, but a new exhibition shifts the focus to cultural heritage restoration through community-led excavation—Preserving Assyria showcases archaeology’s role in safeguarding cultural heritage from targeted destruction.

With 16 objects on display from the Penn Museum’s collection, touchable 3D replicas of monumental relief carvings, and interactive multimedia components, this exhibition will be on view in the Merle-Smith Galleries on the Lower Level starting Saturday, February 8, 2025.

One of the world’s earliest empires, Assyria represents a crucial part of Iraq’s cultural identity, which the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) attempted to erase by destroying many Mesopotamian monuments in 2016––one of which was Mashki Gate in the ancient city of Nineveh (near Mosul in Northern Iraq).

With a long history of collaborating with the Iraqi researchers and officials, exhibition curators Dr. Michael Danti, Program Director of the Iraq Heritage Stabilization Program, and Dr. Richard L. Zettler, Director Emeritus, intend to spotlight the groundbreaking archaeological discoveries at Mashki Gate, and underscore how collaborative excavations center the cultural heritage priorities of the local people.

“Working closely with our Iraqi colleagues and local communities, scientific field archaeology is playing a key role in recovery efforts in Iraq, shedding new light on ancient cultures and, at the same time, enabling us to reconstruct damaged sites in more authentic and sustainable ways,” Dr. Danti explains. “Our main goal is to re-establish and enhance access to cultural heritage as a fundamental human right.”

One of the biggest discoveries since the 19th century are superbly preserved marble reliefs unearthed at Mashki Gate. They date back to an Assyrian king, Sennacherib, who ruled Nineveh from 705 to 681 BCE. As the original skillfully carved panels, depicting finely chiseled war scenes, mountains, grape vines, and palm trees remain in Iraq, visitors will be able to view intricate replicas, made via 3D scanning,of segments from these extraordinary reliefs.

“…These panels can become a celebrated cultural and archaeological attraction for Iraqis and international tourists. Personally, I have longed to touch our ancestors’ artifacts on museum visits in the West. Now, with these panels restored by Iraqi hands, I can experience the joy of physically connecting with our heritage and marvel at the skill and dedication of ancient artists,” explains Iraqi Assyriologist Dr. Ali al-Jabouri, Professor Emeritus at University of Mosul.

To chart the story of the Neo-Assyrian empire and its deep significance to Iraq’s heritage, the exhibition will feature a timeline of Assyrian history; digital reconstructions of what the ancient city once looked like; illustrations of King Sennacherib’s palace; and images from current excavations that offer “day-in-the-life” glimpses of archaeologists-in-action.

Preserving Assyria will illuminate select artifacts from the Penn Museum’s Near East collections, such as a stamp-inscribed brick from Tell Yarah, Iraq (near Mosul) written in the Sumerian language (911-612 BCE); a Sumerian clay tablet that contains ancient spells to ward off witchcraft (1900-1600 BCE); a glazed terracotta wall tile from Hasanlu, Iran (1000–800 BCE), cylinder seals made of quartz and marble; and a protective amulet made of carnelian.

Public programs related to the new exhibition include a special Curator’s Lectureon February 8 at 2:00 pm in Rainey Auditorium, as well as an engaging four-week online class, The Deep Dig: The Rise and Fall of Assyria, led by Dr. Michael Danti beginning March 6.

Included with Museum admission, Preserving Assyria will be on view through February 2026.

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Opening at the Penn Museum on Feb. 8, 2025, the Preserving Assyria exhibition will showcase a rendering of a restored palace wall in Nineveh. Photo_ Penn Museum.jpg

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The remarkably preserved reliefs discovered at the Mashki Gate in Nineveh offer exquisite detail. Portions of this have been 3D scanned and replicas will be on display as a part of Preserving Assyria at the Penn Museum. Opening Feb. 8, 2025  Photo_ Penn Museum.jpg

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This Mashki Gate marble relief shows a high-ranking captive of the Assyrians during a military campaign. Portions of this have been 3D scanned and replicas will be on display as a part of Preserving Assyria at the Penn Museum. Opening Feb. 8, 2025.   Photo_ Penn Museum.jpg

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The U.S.-Iraqi excavation team continue their work to protect and preserve cultural heritage. Opening Feb. 8, 2025, a new exhibition, Preserving Assyria, highlights the Penn Museum’s cultural preservation work in Iraq. Photo-Penn Museum.jpeg

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Penn’s Dr. Michael Danti cleans one of the seven ancient reliefs found at Nineveh. Photo-Penn Museum.jpeg

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An international team of Iraqi archaelogists, alongside researchers from the Penn Museum, uncover the 6.5-foot-high monumental doors ot an Assyrian king’s palace. Photo_ Michael Danti, Penn Museum.JPG

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ABOUT THE PENN MUSEUM

The Penn Museum’s mission is to be a center for inquiry and the ongoing exploration of humanity for our University of Pennsylvania, regional, national, and global communities, following ethical standards and practices.

Through conducting research, stewarding collections, creating learning opportunities, sharing stories, and creating experiences that expand access to archaeology and anthropology, the Museum builds empathy and connections across diverse cultures.

The Penn Museum is open Tuesday–Sunday, 10:00 am–5:00 pm. On first Wednesdays of the month, it is open until 8:00 pm. The Café is open Tuesday–Thursday, 9:00 am–3:00 pm and Friday and Saturday, 10:00 am–2:00 pm. On Sundays, the Café is open 10:30 am–2:30 pm. For information, visit www.penn.museum, call 215.898.4000, or follow @PennMuseum on social media. 

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Article Source: Penn Museum news release.

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Cutting edge simulations unveil clues to human evolution

University of Liverpool—The University of Liverpool has led an international team of scientists to take a fresh look at the running capabilities of Australopithecus afarensis, the early human ancestor famously represented by the fossil ‘Lucy’.

Karl Bates, Professor of Musculoskeletal Biology, convened experts from institutions across the UK and the Netherlands. Together they used cutting-edge computer simulations to uncover how this ancient species ran, using a digital model of ‘Lucy’s’ skeleton.

Previous work on the fossilized footprints of Australopithecus by multiple research teams has suggested that Lucy probably walked relatively upright and much more like a human than a chimpanzee. These new findings demonstrate that Lucy’s overall body shape limited running speed relative to modern humans and therefore support the hypothesis that the human body evolved to improve running performance, with top speed being a more critical driver than previously thought.

Professor Bates said: “When Lucy was discovered 50 years ago, it was by far the most complete skeleton of an early human ancestor. Lucy is a fascinating fossil because it captures what you might call an intermediate stage in Homo sapiens’ evolution. Lucy bridges the gap between our more tree-dwelling ancestors and modern humans, who walk and run efficiently on two legs.

“By simulating running performance in Australopithecus and modern humans with computer models, we’ve been able to address questions about the evolution of running in our ancestors.

“For decades scientists have debated whether more economical walking ability or improved running performance was the primary factor that drove the evolution of many distinctly human characteristics, such as longer legs and shorter arms, stronger leg bones and our arched feet. By illustrating how Australopithecus walked and ran, we have started to answer these questions.”

The team used computer-based movement simulations to model the biomechanics and energetics of running in Australopithecus afarensis, alongside a model of a human. In both the Australopithecus and human models, the team ran multiple simulations where various features thought to be important to modern human running, like larger leg muscles and a long Achilles Tendon, were added and removed, thereby digitally replaying evolutionary events to see how they impact running speed and energy use.

Muscles and other soft tissues are not preserved in fossils, so palaeontologists don’t know how large ‘Lucy’s’ leg muscles and other important parameters were. However, these new digital models varied the muscle properties from chimpanzee-like to human-like, producing a range of estimates for running speed and economy.

The simulations reveal that while Lucy was capable of running upright on both legs, her maximum speeds were significantly slower than those of modern humans. In fact, even the fastest speed the team predicted for Lucy (in a model with very human-like muscles) remained relatively modest at just 11mph (18kph). This is much slower than elite human sprinters, which reach peak speeds of more than 20mph (38kph). The models show the range of intermediate (‘jogging’) speeds that animals use to run longer distances (‘endurance running’) was also very restricted, perhaps suggesting that Australopithecus didn’t engage in the kind of long-distance hunting activities thought to be important to the earliest humans.

Professor Bates continued: “Our results highlight the importance of muscle anatomy and body proportions in the development of running ability. Skeletal strength doesn’t seem to have been a limiting factor, but evolutionary changes to muscles and tendons played a major role in enhancing running speed and economy.

“As the 50th anniversary of Lucy’s discovery is celebrated, this study* not only sheds new light on her capabilities but also underscores how far modern science has come in unravelling the story of human evolution.”

The study, ‘Running performance in Australopithecus afarensis’ was published in Current Biology (DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2024.11.025).

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Reconstruction of “Lucy”, Warsaw Museum of Evolution. Shalom, CC
BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia Commons

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Article Source: University of Liverpool news release

*Running performance in Australopithecus afarensis, Current Biology, 6-Jan-2025. 10.1016/j.cub.2024.11.025

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Footprints in Time: Second Edition

Editor’s note: What follows is the updated anthology on recent trace fossil discoveries that have revised scholarly thinking on human prehistory. These stories tell us that there is much more to be explored beyond fossil bones and stone tools for shedding light on the deep human past.  

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Ancient Cousins on an Ancient Shoreline

Scientists are uncovering more evidence that at least two distinctly different hominin species roamed the country around an ancient lake shoreline in present-day Kenya.

The landscape surrounding Lake Turkana in northwestern Kenya can be described as stark, dry and forbidding. Despite this, occasional heavy rains are no stranger to the region, and when they strike, they can leave enough change on the surface in their aftermath to expose objects that beforehand were hidden beneath.

Like fossil bone fragments.

Teams of highly trained fossil-hunting Kenyans, with eagle eyes primed to spot such fragments, have become regulars on the ground after such downpours. In 2021, regular Richard Loki noticed some very large bird tracks while walking and scouring the surface. And then he found something else much more exciting — a hominin footprint. The find prompted Luise Leakey, a paleontologist and granddaughter of the famous African fossil hunter Louis Leakey, to lead a team to excavate the footprint surface in July 2022. After careful and meticulous excavation of what turned out to be multiple prints, and evaluating the site and applying 3D imaging technology, the team of scientists determined that there were actually two sets of footprints, each set representing a different species of hominin. Researchers evaluated form, gait and stance indicated by the footprints, and compared the data to other relevant data and research.

Kevin Hatala, the resulting published research study’s first author, and an associate professor of biology at Chatham University in Pittsburgh, Pa., led the research and study* to identify and interpret the footprints and the implications. Analysis showed that two individuals of separate species, classified as Homo Erectus and Paranthropus Boisei, both bipedal hominins, walked the same surface at approximately the same time.

The researchers concluded that there is now confirming evidence of two different types of hominin bipedalism in the East Turkana region at the same time, and that they are associated with two different species contemporaneously using the same ancient lake habitat.

“Their presence on the same surface, made closely together in time, places the two species at the [ancient] lake margin, using the same habitat,” said Craig Feibel as documented in a Rutgers University news release*. Feibel is also an author of the study that Hatala led and a professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and Department of Anthropology in the Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences.

According to Feibel, footprints like this are considered “trace fossils”. This means they are not actually part of the body but show evidence of behavior.

The age of these prints? Feibel analyzed the stratigraphy and applied dating techniques, resulting in an age determination of 1.5 million years ago. He also studied the deposition of the footprints on the surface. His analysis indicates that the two hominins walked the same surface only within a few hours of each other.

“The idea that they lived contemporaneously may not be a surprise,” said Feibel. “But this is the first time demonstrating it. I think that’s really huge.”*

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A footprint hypothesized to have been created by a Homo erectus individual. Kevin G. Hatala. From New footprints offer evidence of co-existing hominid species 1.5 million years ago, by Becky Ham, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Nov. 28, 2024.

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An aerial photo of the excavated trackway surface, with members of the research team along its perimeter. Credit Louise N. Leakey, From New footprints offer evidence of co-existing hominid species 1.5 million years ago, by Becky Ham, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Nov. 28, 2024.

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A footprint hypothesized to have been created by a Paranthropus boisei individual. Kevin G. Hatala, From New footprints offer evidence of co-existing hominid species 1.5 million years ago, by Becky Ham, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Nov. 28, 2024.

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Members of the research team excavating the trackway surface. Neil T. Roach, From New footprints offer evidence of co-existing hominid species 1.5 million years ago, by Becky Ham, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Nov. 28, 2024.

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A trackway of footprints hypothesized to have been created by a Paranthropus boisei individual. Credit Neil T. Roach, From New footprints offer evidence of co-existing hominid species 1.5 million years ago, by Becky Ham, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Nov. 28, 2024.

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This latest development is one among a number of recent fossil footprint discoveries that have shed additional light on human prehistory and evolution. It follows a line of remarkable discoveries that have revealed trace fossils extending back in time well over 3 million years….

*Article Source: A fossil first: Scientists find 1.5-million-year-old footprints of two different species of human ancestors at same spot, by Kitta McPherson, Rutgers University news release

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Laetoli: The Unfolding Story

3.66-million-year-old footprint finds at the iconic hominin site of Laetoli may be changing what we know about ancient human-related ancestors.

Laetoli, Tanzania — September, 2015 — A small team of scientists and skilled excavators crouched face-down into shallow square 2 x 2 meter test pits they had carefully and methodically dug into the dry volcanic sand of an African savanna landscape. They were isolated here, with the only nearest sign of civilization, a small village called Endulen, about 50 minutes away by car. The air was almost unbearably hot, typical of the long 7-month dry season in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, a region of low-rolling light yellow-brown tropical grasslands textured with a mix of acacias, candelabra trees, jackalberry trees, whistling thorns, Bermuda grass, baobabs, and elephant grass. For millions of years, what is today the Conservation Area has been home to thousands of different species of animals, including the better-known varieties such as lions, cheetahs, hyenas, and jackals, with wildebeest, zebras and gazelles passing through. This team, led by Dr. Marco Cherin of the University of Perugia, Italy, was revealing some very ancient footprints — more than 3 million years old, to be more precise. They represented animals still common to the African landscape today, like equids, rhinoceros, giraffe, and guineafowl. 

But most tantalizing were the remarkably preserved footprints of a special animal.

A human.

Or something very akin to a human.

It’s certainly not the first time scientists have found traces of prehistoric humans, or extinct human-like relatives, in this region. About 50 km to the north of where Cherin and his colleagues were digging, scientists discovered some of the first fossilized evidence of an ancient ancestral human species, or hominin, over 55 years ago at Olduvai Gorge, radically changing the direction of human evolution research; and only 150 m to the north, another iconic site in the Laetoli area revealed remarkably well-preserved human-like 3.66-million-year-old footprints in 1978. But for Cherin, the 2015 find was perhaps the greatest discovery of his life, and for good reason. The footprints he and his colleagues were now uncovering provided potentially revelatory new answers to questions that scientists have debated for decades.

Rare Finds

Discoveries at Laetoli began around 1935, when the renowned paleontologist Louis Leakey was clued into investigating the area. Leakey recovered several mammalian fossils and one left lower canine fossil tooth which later proved to be that of a hominin. Then, in 1938 and 1939, German explorer Ludwig Kohl-Larsen found hominin molars, premolars and incisors in the same area, further revealing the area’s potential. But it wasn’t until 1974 when the discovery of yet another hominin premolar generated renewed interest in the area, drawing the renowned British paleontologist Mary Leakey to investigate sites in the area, revealing new fossils representing 23 hominin individuals, including a fragmentary infant skeleton, dated to between 3.46 and 3.76 million years old.

The dating and examination of the fossil remains suggested they were from Australopithecus afarensis, the hominin species made famous by Donald Johanson with his discovery of the fossil skeletal remains of ‘Lucy’ in 1974 in the Hadar region of Ethiopia. The Lucy find was dated to about 3.2 mya (million years ago), and today scientists broadly accept a date range of between 3.85 and 2.95 mya for the Au. afarensis species. 

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(A) Location of the study area in northern Tanzania. (B) Location of Laetoli within the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, about 50 km south of Olduvai Gorge. (C) Plan view of the area of Laetoli Locality 8 (Sites G and S). Site G was the earlier, 1978 site. Site S is the current site. Figure: Giovanni Boschian. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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Fossils were not all that were found in the Laetoli area, however. Laetoli is perhaps best known today for its ancient animal trackways created in ash laid down millions of years ago by the eruption of a nearby volcano, the ash having transformed into a volcanic tuff over time. To date, mammal, bird, and insect prints and trails have been found in 18 out of 33 specific locations. But perhaps the most sensational find turned out to be the ancient 88 ft.- long trackway consisting of 70 footprints embedded in an excavated layer of 3.66 mya volcanic tuff — a trackway that exhibited the clear signs of something quite human. Paul Abell, a member of Leakey’s team, first encountered them in 1978 after Leakey and her team uncovered a series of other animal tracks imprinted in the same ancient tuff beginning in 1976. The new finds made headlines in science venues worldwide, and initiated a subsequent series of studies, the results of which began to shed additional light on defining the Au. afarensis hominin species, which by 1978 had already been suggested by many scientists to be a forerunner to humans on the biological evolution spectrum.

Careful examination and documentation of the trackway revealed three individuals walking together in the same direction at the same time. They were of different body sizes, with the largest individual walking side-by-side with the smallest, and an intermediate-sized individual walking just behind the largest. All walked with a human-like speed. The shape of their feet and the configuration of the toes were consistent with what was known about the feet of Au. afarensis, fossil remains of which were found in the same area and sediment layer as the footprints. Perhaps the biggest takeaway from this discovery was the affirmation that Au. afarensis was bipedal, and walked much like a modern human — a gait where the heel strikes the ground first followed by a push-off from the toes. Secondly, the footprint trackway spacing indicated a short stride, suggesting the individuals were small in stature, or at least short-legged — also consistent with the general size determination for Au. afarensis at the time. (Image above right: The Laetoli hominin trackway, Momotarou2012, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, Wikimedia Commons)

Where was this small group of early hominins going and why? To find a more friendly location in which to sojourn? To find a new watering hole? To date, there is no evidence to confidently suggest any answers. But information gleaned from study of the site has given some clues about the environment and the circumstances. It is clear that they were treading this path shortly after the ash fell and settled over the landscape following a nearby volcanic eruption. Much like mud, the ash was still fresh with the wetness bestowed upon it by a recent light rainfall, producing a consistency good for making impressions. The eruptions had to have been rather frequent, as subsequent layers of ash fall covered the footprints and thus preserved them before they were superimposed by any other subsequent activity, such as other animals. Other prints uncovered in the same tuff layers indicated the presence of another twenty different animal species that existed at the time, including hyenas, baboons, wild cats, giraffes, rhinos, wild boars, gazelles, several kinds of antelope, buffaloes, extinct elephant relatives, birds and hares. The sediments also showed that the climate was a little wetter than the present day.

Were these hominins toolmakers? No artifacts were found, at least within the same sediment beds that contained the trackway, and no artifacts have been found to date that could be associated with Au. afarensis anywhere else in the Laetoli area—still consistent with current thinking that afarensis was not a toolmaker, unlike later hominins.

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laetolifootprintstudy

Above: Three dimensional scans of experimental footprints and a Laetoli footprint.  Contours are 1 mm.

A) Contour map of modern human footprint (Subject 6) walking with a normal, extended limb gait and side view of normal, extended limb footprint.

B) Contour map of modern human footprint (Subject 6) walking with a BKBH (ape-like bent-knee, bent-hip) gait and side view of BKBH print.

C) Contour map of Laetoli footprint (G1-37) and side view of Laetoli footprint (G1-37). Note the difference in heel and toe depths between modern humans walking with extended and BKBH gaits. Laetoli has similar toe relative to heel depths as the modern human extended limb print.

This is the earliest direct evidence of kinematically human-like bipedalism currently known, and it shows that extended limb bipedalism evolved long before the appearance of the genus Homo. Since extended-limb bipedalism is more energetically economical than ape-like bipedalism, energy expenditure was likely an important selection pressure on hominin bipeds by 3.6 Ma.  Image: Raichlen DA, Gordon AD, Harcourt-Smith WEH, Foster AD, Haas WR Jr  Image and text from Raichlen DA, Gordon AD, Harcourt-Smith WEH, Foster AD, Haas WR Jr (2010) Laetoli Footprints Preserve Earliest Direct Evidence of Human-Like Bipedal Biomechanics. PLoS ONE 5(3): e9769. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0009769

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Finding Chewie

As efforts in the ongoing exploration of human origins research would have it, the story at Laetoli did not end with the 1978 discoveries and their subsequent study. But it wasn’t until 2014, more than 35 years later, that the next major chapter in the area began to unfold. Plans to construct a new field museum in the Laetoli area tasked Fidelis T. Masao and Elgidius B. Ichumbaki of the University of Dar es Salaam and their co-workers to undertake a systematic survey and excavation (known as a cultural heritage impact assessment, a process required by Tanzanian law) before land preparation and construction could begin. Masao, long a well-known player in paleoanthropological research in Tanzania, and his colleagues asked Marco Cherin(1) of the School of Paleoanthropology of the University of Perugia, including researchers from the Universities of Rome, Florence and Pisa, to join them in 2015. A total of 62 randomly placed test pits were methodically and carefully excavated with the objective of exposing and examining the ‘Footprint Tuff’, the same sediments in which the Laetoli footprints were found in 1978. The first phase involved the use of small shovels to quickly remove the overlying modern topsoil (approximately 20–25 cm), graduating to lighter excavation tools such as trowels and pickaxes to dig into the underlying layers until they reached the first signs of the Footprint Tuff. From this point, Cherin and his team knew that excavation had to proceed with the highest level of caution, using small wooden tools, dental tools, small trowels and brushes. 

prints

What they had hoped to find began to emerge. In this case, fourteen hominin footprints, along with those of other animals, eventually took form in three test pits. According to Cherin and his colleagues, the hominin prints represented a single individual walking to create, in this exposure, a trackway of 32 meters in an SSE to NNW direction— the very same direction as those uncovered at the earlier Laetoli footprint site in 1978. And the tracks bore a remarkable similarity to those of the earlier site, calculated with a similar walking speed. But there was one major exception — these footprints were significantly larger. Cherin and colleagues determined that they represented an individual with large relative stature and mass, standing 165 cm in height. By the end of the September 2015 field season, they discovered a second hominin trackway, this one made by a smaller individual. But the apparent size of the first, larger individual, was a surprise, particularly given the assessment that this person, like those who made the trackways at the earlier Laetoli site, was likely a member of the Au. afarensis species, a species generally thought to be significantly smaller in stature than hominins that evolved later in the human evolutionary spectrum.  “We nicknamed him Chewie, after the famous Chewbacca of Star Wars,” said Cherin. 

All footprints, including those of other animals, were very carefully cleaned using soft brushes, revealing greater detail and to better measure, photograph, trace and map them for continuing study. Apart from the hominin footprints, the animal tracks provided critical information about the kind of environment where Chewie made his home — a mosaic of grassland, woodland, dry tropical bushland, and riverine forest — much like the savanna environment that exists there today. (Image above left: Fidelis T Masao and colleagues, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International, Wikimedia Commons)

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Fidelis T. Masao (University of Dar es Salaam) (right) coordinates the digging operations with the Masai assistants. Photo Sofia Menconero. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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 Preliminary digging and cleaning operations at Laetoli Site S. Photo Sofia Menconero. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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 Marco Cherin (University of Perugia) cleans the footprint-bearing surface at Laetoli Site S. Photo Sofia Menconero. Licensed under CC BY 4.0

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 Giorgio Manzi (Sapienza University of Rome) and Fidelis T. Masao (University of Dar es Salaam) discuss the new discovery at Laetoli Site S. Photo Raffaello Pellizzon. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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 Four hominin tracks photographed at sunset in test-pit L8 at Laetoli Site S. Photo Raffaello Pellizzon. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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 Before the photogrammetric survey, all surfaces with footprints are sketched on plastic sheets. Photo Raffaello Pellizzon. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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Laetoli_14

 Shaded 3D photogrammetric elevation model of the L8 trackway. Color renders heights as in the color bar. Figure Dawid A. Iurino and Sofia Menconero. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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Getting to Know Afarensis

The footprint finds at the new site brought up the count by two hominin individuals, making it now five individuals for whom evidence has been found at Laetoli. Five individuals walking on the same ancient, soft, wet ash surface at the same time, 3.66 million years ago, long before the genus Homo, the genus to which modern day humans belong, walked the earth. 

Were they all part of the same group?

Cherin and his colleagues think so.

According to Cherin, their careful study of the geology and morphology of the area, including the detailed characteristics of the newly exposed stratigraphic sequence, provided “a very good margin of confidence”* that the newly discovered tracks belonged to the same surface as that found in the Footprint Tuff at the earlier site. “They were walking together on the same paleosurface, in the same direction and with the same speed,” says Cherin. “This allows us to consider the five individuals (the two in our [new] ‘Site S’ and the three in the 1970s ‘Site G’) as part of the same social group of Australopithecus afarensis.”

There may be some room for doubt, however. “The correlation between Site G and Site S cannot be absolutely indisputable, at least for the time being, because the original profile [of Site G] could not be examined directly,” state the study authors in the subject report. Moreover,  “it must be pointed out that extra-fine correlation between outcrops, even in a depositional environment with moderate lateral variability like the Footprint Tuff deposition area, can be affected by major uncertainty.”*  

Nonetheless, footprint evidence like this can potentially say much about the footprint makers. “Footprints are a rare and unique form of evidence of our ancestors, both physical and behavioral,” says Briana Pobiner, a key paleoanthropologist with the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.  “Fossils can tell us about the general body size and shape, but with footprints we can learn about how fast ancient people walked or ran and what kinds of social groups they were in.”

Pobiner speaks from experience. She was part of a team that investigated more than 400 footprints uncovered at another site in Tanzania called Engare Sero. Here, modern humans — Homo sapiens — walked across a surface of ash laid down between 5,000 and 19,000 years ago, spewed out from the nearby volcano, Ol Doinyo Lengai. The study of those prints revealed that some of the individuals were moving at a jogging pace, and one set of prints suggested the possibility of a broken toe. Other prints revealed what seemed to be a group of about a dozen associated people composed mostly of women and children, suggesting a particular social unit of people, or at least part of one, traveling southwest to an unknown destination. In this place, Pobiner shared some of the same feelings Cherin, Masao and others must have felt at Leotoli: “The opportunity to literally walk next to the footprints of an ancient human, to hundreds of them, was haunting,” Pobiner continued. “They were RIGHT THERE, in the same spot I was standing, but 19,000 years ago. They walked where I walked. What did they see? What were they thinking? The scenery today is stark and beautiful, with the volcano towering in the background; it’s hot, dry, and dusty. Was it the same back then? It’s hard not to feel an eerie, emotional connection doing research on human footprints.”  

Laetoli and Egare Sero are not the only places discoveries like this have taken place — Koobi Fora, another famous hominin site in East Africa, features hominin footprints that are 1.5 mllion years old, the Willandra Lakes site in Australia revealed 700 human footprints that are 20,000 years old, and in South Africa two sites along the coast have yielded prints dated as much as 120,000 years ago.

But all of these sites are rare when compared to the total fossil and archaeological record bearing on hominins.

What distinguishes the Laetoli discoveries from others, according to Cherin and colleagues, are the possible new implications the latest finds might have for understanding one of humankind’s earliest ancestral lineages, the Australopithecines, and more specifically, Au. afarensis. More than behavior and movement, the tracks at Site S may have revealed something about size and social structure.

“The remarkable stature of Chewie (165 cm) is the highest ever estimated for any australopithecine and is similar to average values of more derived hominin species, such as Homo erectus or Homo sapiens itself,” says Cherin. “This demonstrates that the increase of stature did not occur along a linear trend during human evolution and is not directly linked to encephalization.”

In other words, increase in height and/or body size does not necessarily conform to the traditional thinking that hominins like Homo erectus, a more derived or ‘advanced’ extinct human species that emerged later in the fossil record, were the first “tall” or more standard-sized humans, correlating with a similar increase in brain size. 

On the other hand, was Chewie an aberration among his species peer group? After all, today we know there are some unusually tall people among our own world population, deviating from the norm. Did Cherin and his colleagues simply come across one of those deviants among the Australopithecines? The discovery of additional tracks laid down during the same time horizon in East Africa and in other locations would of course likely shed additional light and provide evidence to either support or detract from Cherin’s tentative conclusion. 

Dimorphism and Gorillas

The Site S tracks revealed some additional implications, according to Cherin.  

“Given the impressive stature, Chewie was very likely a large male,” he suggests. “Another three Laetoli individuals have a stature of about 130-145 cm, thus being probably females (or sub-adults). The smallest individual (113 cm) was probably a juvenile. This social structure (i.e., one large male with more than one smaller female) is similar to that of the living gorilla, in which one male has a “harem” of smaller mates with their cubs. This similarity allows us to hypothesize that Au. afarensis may have been a polygynous species.”

The published study report summarizes the rationale for his thinking:

The impressive record of bipedal tracks from Laetoli Locality 8 (Site G and the new Site S) may open a window on the behaviour of a group of remote human ancestors, envisaging a scenario in which at least five individuals (G1, G2, G3, S1 and S2) were walking in the same time frame, in the same direction and at a similar moderate speed. This aspect must be evaluated in association with the pronounced body-size variation within the sample, which implies marked differences between age ranges and a considerable degree of sexual dimorphism in Au. afarensis. Significant implications about the social structure of this stem hominin species derive from these physical and behavioural characteristics, suggesting that reproductive strategies and social structure among at least some of the early bipedal hominins were closer to a gorilla-like model than to chimpanzees or modern humans.*

Some scientists, no doubt, have and will continue to take issue with the conclusions. Human evolution research, by its very nature, has always been a hotbed for debate, and continuing research and discovery has historically changed what we know about human evolution, new studies and finds either debunking or confirming previous hypotheses or conclusions. But for now, Cherin’s conclusions remain an intriguing possibility.

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Presentazione1

 Minimum and maximum estimated statures of selected fossil hominins by species and locality over time for the interval 4–1 million years. Figure Marco Cherin. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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 Australopithecus afarensis: Defining a species

The story of the discovery of Australopithecus afarensis actually began with Donald Johanson and a team of scientists and excavators at a remote site in the area of Hadar, Ethiopia on November 24, 1974. Here, while surveying and mapping the area, Johanson spotted a forearm bone, skull bone, femur, lower jaw bone, pelvis, and some rib bones at the surface, identifying them as those of a hominin. This sparked two weeks of excavation resulting in the recovery of several hundred more bone fragments that constituted 40 percent of what was determined to be a single hominin (based primarily on the fact that there was no duplication in the recovered bone element anatomy). Nick-named “Lucy” by the excavators, the find became the first and perhaps most iconic specimen of the Au. afarensis hominin species. Examination of the bones further indicated that Lucy was indeed a female, standing about three-and-a-half feet tall and weighing between 60 to 65 pounds — diminutive by modern human standards — with a small brain, not much larger than a chimpanzee. Using paleomagnetic, paleontological, and sediment studies, researchers dated Lucy to almost 3.18 million years old. 


lucy1
Among the most revelatory findings from examination of Lucy’s bones was the determination that she walked upright, much like humans, suggesting a life-way much different than the other primates, where knuckle-walking and an arboreal lifestyle (movement in trees) was most characteristic. But Lucy’s arms were proportionately longer than those of later hominins and modern humans, a characteristic more like those of chimpanzees and the the other Great Apes. A recent study, however, has shed some additional light on the question. That study, by Christopher Ruff and colleagues of Johns Hopkins University and published November 30, 2016 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE, involved taking X-ray microtomography scans of Lucy’s upper arm bone (humerus) and upper leg bone (femur) to produce cross-sections for 3D modeling. This revealed that Lucy’s humerus and femur bone strengths were somewhere between the arm and leg bone strengths of today’s chimpanzees and humans, suggesting that Lucy, and by extension the Au. afarensis species, spent a significant amount of time using arms to move through trees. Based on modern animal analogs of behavior, this meant that Au. afarensis used trees to forage for food and escape predators. Moreover, Ruff’s analysis suggested that afarensis’ walking gait may have been somewhat different and less efficient than that of modern humans. In any case, however, the footprints at Laetoli have been considered strong confirmation that Au. afarensis walked upright as a sustained activity. (Pictured right, the full skeletal array of Lucy’s remains, 120, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, Wikimedia Commons)

To date, scientists have recovered fossils from more than 300 Au. afarensis individuals discovered at various sites, such as Hadar and Dikika, in Ethiopia and Laetoli in Tanzania and have placed the species within a 3.85 – 2.95 mya date range.

 

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 Bone Clones skull cast of Australopithecus afarensis “Lucy”, Bone Clones, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, Wikimedia Commons

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An endocast of the Australopithecus afarensis brain on display in the Hall of Human Origins in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.  To create an endocast, scientists fill the inside of the skull with a rubber-like material, making a model of the brain. The brain and its blood vessels leave imprints on the inside of the skull. Because more advanced brains have smaller veins and many more folds and lobes, an endocast is very useful in determing how intelligent a human ancestor might have been, and what portions of its brain were more developed.  Tim Evanson, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic, Wikimedia Commons

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 Australopithecus afarensis paleoanthropological sites in East Africa – Tanzania, Kenya and Ethiopia  Chartep, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International, Wikimedia Commons

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Based on research, if one were to observe a living Au. afarensis, one would see a creature that looked much like an ape with some human-like features. It had apelike face proportions and a small braincase and apelike long arms with hands exhibiting curved fingers. But it also had small canine teeth like other, later early humans and walked upright on a regular basis. Many scientists suggest that its adaptations for both walking upright and living in trees helped the species survive more than 900,000 years before going extinct, much longer than the time our own species, Homo sapiens, has existed.

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Site A and a Hominin Mystery

Though the big splash made from the discoveries at sites S and G continues to loom large in the history of human evolution research, these remarkable finds were not the only revelations uncovered at Laetoli. In 1976, two years before the excavations at sites S and G, Peter Jones and Philip Leakey identified a set of potential fossilized hominin footprints through excavations at nearby Site A. This site, a 490 m2 area dated to 3.66 million years ago (Ma), consisted of 18,400 animal tracks and a trackway featuring 5 footprints that appeared at first blush to be possibly hominin. The footprints indicated mammalian biped movement with “a rolling and probably slow-moving gait, with the hips swivelling at each step,”** and “somewhat shambling, with one foot crossing in front of the other” [cross-stepping, a behavior not usually attributed to a hominin gait]*** 

There was something therefore clearly curious about the footprints, and researchers were inconclusive about the footprint makers, entertaining the hypothesis that they could have been left by a juvenile ursid [bear]. Without further study and additional clearing of the prints’ matrix fill, scientists deferred further consideration to another time. 

Enter here Dr. Ellison McNutt, Assistant Professor, Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, and a project team of researchers, In 2019, they re-located, excavated and cleaned the site A trackway, exposing the subject footprints more cleanly for detailed study. In the process, they produced a digital archive using 3D photogrammetry and laser scanning and compared the footprints to those of humans, chimpanzees, and American black bears. After extensive data collection, experimentation and comparative analysis, they concluded that the footprints “resemble those of hominins more than ursids” consistent with the “original interpretation of a small, cross-stepping bipedal hominin” as suggested from the initial excaation in 1976.**** 

What Hominin?

It would be easy to assume that the hominin footprints at Site A, given the similar date range and shared ancient Pliocene environment between the locations of sites S, G and A, should be attributable to A. afarensis. But McNutt and colleagues suggest otherwise in their 2021 published study report:

“We therefore conclude that the site A footprints were made by a bipedal hominin with a distinct and presumably more primitive foot than A. afarensis…..foot morphology and gait kinematics inferred from the preserved footprints precludes them from having been made by A. afarensis.”****

Given this conclusion, then, what other hominin produced these footprints? Available data is not robust enough to make that determination. It therefore remains a mystery until further discoveries, research and data from Laetoli and other Pliocene sites can better inform an emerging new paradigm where multiple taxa of hominins coexisted or at least overlapped in time on the same ancient African landscape.  

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a, A model of site A generated using photogrammetry showing the five hominin footprints. b, Corresponding contour map of the site generated from a 3D surface scan with scale bar. c, Map of Laetoli localities 7 and 8, indicating the positions of bipedal trackways A, G and S (redrawn from ref. 49). d, e, Topographical maps of the two best preserved A footprints, A2 (d) and A3 (e). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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Moving Forward  

Like many other hominin sites throughout Africa, scientists would likely tell us that there is probably much more to glean from the areas in which the sites are located, adding to the record of early human existence on the African continent. Laetoli has only revealed a fraction of the trackways that may still lie buried beneath the modern dry volcanic sand of this ancient savanna grassland. Cherin and his colleagues plan to return to the site. “We are now collecting funding for new field seasons at Laetoli,” says Cherin. “Our goal is to expose some additional footprints to study the locomotion of the track-makers and, simultaneously, to elaborate a proper conservation strategy to make these incredible findings available for future generations.”

The story of Laetoli is clearly not over.                                                                

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 Reconstruction of the Laetoli palaeolandscape and the Au. afarensis group 3.66 million years ago. Artwork Dawid A. Iurino. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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(1) Marco Cherin is a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Perugia, Italy, whose first research topic is the systematics, biology, ecology and evolution of Plio-Pleistocene terrestrial mammals of Europe and East Africa. He works mainly on terrestrial carnivores, such as canids, felids, mustelids, etc.  In 2010, together with his colleague Angelo Barili (Natural History Museum, University of Perugia), he began a collaborative relationship with Fidelis Masao (University of Dar es Salaam). Every year they organize a field workshop in Olduvai Gorge, a famous Tanzanian paleoanthropological site not far from Laetoli. 

*Masao, et al., New Footprints from Laetoli (Tanzania) provide evidence for marked body size variation in early hominins, eLife 2016;5:e19568.DOI: 10.7554/eLife.19568 

**Leakey, M. Pliocene footprints at Laetoli, northern Tanzania. Antiquity 52, 133 (1978).

***Leakey, M. D. & Hay, R. L. Pliocene footprints in the Laetoli Beds at Laetoli, northern Tanzania. Nature 278, 317–323 (1979).

****McNutt, E.J., Hatala, K.G., Miller, C. et al. Footprint evidence of early hominin locomotor diversity at Laetoli, Tanzania. Nature 600, 468–471 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04187-7.  Material and applicable images in this article relating to Site A are drawn from this study under the following license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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Footprints in the Silt

The startling discovery of million-year-old human footprints on a beach in the United Kingdom had scientists jumping.

It was an almost desperate race against time. On one side was the ocean, its relentless incoming and outgoing tides beating and constantly reshaping the beach, as any ocean would do. On the opposite side were the overlying cliffs, the erosion of which through time helped to expose a series of small hollows, what appeared to be human footprints, on an ancient beach surface dated hundreds of thousands of years into the past. This team of scientists knew they had only a short window of time to observe and record them before the elements erased the hollows back into oblivion.

“When we first saw them, we were in a state of initial disbelief, but once we’d ruled out all the other possibilities we were utterly amazed that, first, they survived, and second, that we happened to be there during the few days that they were exposed,” said Nick Ashton, a curator with the British Museum for over 25 years. Ashton is also the Director of the Ancient Human Occupation of Britain Project (AHOB) funded by the Leverhulme Trust. He has been directing the oceanside Happisburgh Paleolithic excavations, where these footprint finds were located. The site has yielded evidence of a human presence as far back as 800,000 years ago, and the footprints tell a story of humans who may have walked this place even more anciently.

But Ashton and his team faced a serious challenge. Their task to initially examine and document them could only be measured in a few weeks, if not days. 

“The first problem was mobilizing a team to record them,” said Ashton. “But Sarah Duffy from York University stepped into the breach, coming down at short notice to record them using multi-image photogrammetry.” Duffy is an archaeologist with specialized expertise in digital imaging techniques as they apply to archaeology.

“The weather was foul,” he added. “We couldn’t get down to the beach until just after 5 pm just as it started to lash with rain. Heavy seas meant that there were only 3-4 hours in which to record them, but first we had to remove the beach sand that had accumulated since the last tide and remove the excess water from the hollows. As Sarah started the recording we were continually using sponges to remove the persistent rain-water. By this time the light was fading, despite being May and I really had little faith in the technique working. We eventually left the beach cold, wet and somewhat demoralized. However, the results were stunning.”

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 Above and below: Area A (which includes the hollows/footprints) at Happisburgh from cliff top looking south. (Photo: Martin Bates).

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The imaging showed that the hollows were elongated, like the shape of a foot, and the majority of them fell within the range previously determined through paleoanthropological research as juvenile to adult hominin foot sizes. “In many cases, the arch and front/ back of the foot can be identified and in one case the impression of toes can be seen,” write Ashton and colleagues in their more recent research report.*

Moreover, further study indicated that they were dealing not with just one individual, but a group of perhaps five individuals of mixed ages — perhaps an adult and several children. And whoever they were, they were apparently moving in a southerly direction along mudflats of an ancient estuary of a tidally-influenced river.

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 Above and below: The footprint hollows in situ on the beach at Happisburgh. (Photos: Martin Bates). 

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 Above: Detail of footprint surface. (Photo: Martin Bates)

 

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Vertical image of Area A at Happisburgh with model of footprint surface produced from photogrammetric survey with enlarged photo of footprint 8 showing toe impressions. © Happisburgh Project

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Enhanced 3D model of footprint surface produced from photogrammetric survey by using color to indicate depth. © Happisburgh Project

 

But perhaps the biggest find had to do with age. The ancient laminated silt layers in which the footprints were found were directly associated with ancient laminated silt layers and lag gravels that had already been dated nearby. Artifacts, flora and fauna found within those layers helped to pinpoint the age range.

“An artefact assemblage has been recovered from these lag gravels, consisting of flint flakes, flake tools and cores. The sediments also contain a rich assemblage of fauna and flora which suggest that the archaeological evidence can be attributed to the later part of an interglacial. This interglacial is dated on the basis of biostratigraphical and palaeomagnetic evidence to the latter part of the Early Pleistocene, perhaps MIS 21 or MIS 25,” reported Ashton and colleagues.* 

In other words, the footprints, according to Ashton and his research team, are dated to between ca. 1 and 0.78 million years ago.

The finding was astounding. This meant that this was the oldest known hominin footprint surface outside of Africa. It pushed the record of human occupation of northern Europe back by at least 350,000 years. 

The footprints have become a major a milestone in a series of discoveries beginning in 2000 at this location, named after the nearby village of Happisburgh on the coast of eastern England. 

“The first evidence of Palaeolithic archaeology was a handaxe found by a local person walking their dog (Mike Chambers),” said Ashton. “Although this dates to 500,000 years ago, it led to further fieldwork and the discovery of ‘Site 3’ dating to 800,000 years old and subsequently the footprints.”

Happisburgh has been found to feature a remarkable concentration of Early Stone Age, or Lower Palaeolithic, sites that were buried in time under glacial sediments and subsequently exposed in time as a result of coastal erosion. Thus far, excavations have revealed numerous artifacts as well as butchered large mammal bones and other biological remains across five identified sites, tell-tale signs of a human presence during a cool climatic period around 500,000 years ago and earlier. At “Site 3”, the location of the recently discovered footprints, about 80 stone tools have been uncovered during large scale excavations from 2005 to 2010. Studies have shown that this area was once the location of an ancient river channel. The river was the ancestral river of the current Thames which, hundreds of thousands of years ago, flowed into the North Sea 150 kilometres north of its present day estuary. 

Research on the plant and animal remains recovered from the site have afforded archaeologists and other scientists the opportunity to reconstruct the climate and environment of the area as it existed more than half a million years ago, at the time the artifact-bearing sediments were deposited. They found that these early humans occupied the area during a cooling period when a conifer woodland was predominant: 

From palynological analysis of adjoining sediments, the local vegetation consisted of a mosaic of open coniferous forest of pine (Pinus), spruce (Picea), with some birch (Betula). Alder (Alnus) was growing in wetter areas and there were patches of heath and grassland. This vegetation is characteristic of the cooler climate typically found at the beginning or end of an interglacial or during an interstadial period….*

To date, no human fossil bones have been excavated at Site 3 or any of the other four sites. But now, analysis of the footprints, combined with current knowledge about early human occupation of Europe, are providing some clues about who these people were and how they might fit into the developing landscape of the first humans in the European geographic arena.

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 Reconstruction of Happisburgh, over 800,000 years ago. © John Sibbick

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Measuring the Evidence

The researchers measured a total of 152 hollows/footprints, indicating a preponderance of elongated forms and shapes, form features and measurements that suggested they were made by perhaps 5 individual humans of varying size and age. Foot size yielded estimates of height. Most significantly, the dimensions seem to fit neatly into the range identified through previous studies and archaeological investigations as attributed to an early human form that is known to have occupied Europe during the Middle Pleistocene.

“Overall the estimated foot size, foot area and stature of the Happisburgh hominins correspond with the estimates for Homo antecessor,” report Ashton, et.al.*

Homo antecessor (or H. antecessor) — the name derives from landmark human fossil discoveries made at the archaeological cave sites of Gran Dolina and Sima del Elefante at the Sierra de Atapuerca mountain in northern Spain. There, archaeologists Eudald CarbonellJuan Luis Arsuaga and J. M. Bermúdez de Castro discovered fossil evidence of an extinct human species that lived between  800,000 to 1.2 million years ago. Carbonell and his colleagues estimate that the adult H. antecessor stood about 1.6-1.8 m (5½-6 feet) tall, similar to the recent estimates from Happisburgh (ca. 0.93 for the juvenile and 1.73 m for the adult), and weighed roughly 90 kg (200 pounds). Their brain sizes are estimated to be 1,000–1,150 cm³, smaller than the 1,350 cm³ average for modern humans. But because the fossil evidence is comparatively scarce, little else is known about the physiology of this ancient human species. To date, these sites are the only locations where fossilized remains of the species have been found, but the finds have interjected a new chapter in the developing picture of human evolution and the advent of early humans (hominins) on the European subcontinent. 

So now, Happisburgh adds yet another discovery to the mix: H. antecessor, or something like it, occupied the northern parts of Europe, or at least the region today known as the UK, as much as 1 million years ago. 

Walking the Beach

The evidence thus far could present an intriguing, albeit incomplete picture of what could be going on in this place so long ago. Informed by the findings and what he already knows about the prehistory of the area and the interdisciplinary science thus far applied to human beginnings in this part of the world, Ashton paints a hypothetical picture:

“We appear to be dealing with a small family group walking along the muddy fringes of an estuary perhaps 10 to 15 miles from the coast. It would be nice to imagine that they’re pausing in their walk to collect shell fish, crabs and possibly seaweed. Around would have been the grassy floodplain, grazed by deer, horse and bison together with more exotic animals such as rhino, hippo and elephant. In the distance coniferous forest would have dominated the surrounding hills.”

With more work, this picture could become much larger with greater detail. But time is of the essence. As Ashton reports: 

The rarity of such evidence is equalled only by its fragility at Happisburgh, where severe coastal erosion is both revealing and rapidly destroying sites that are of international significance. The pre-glacial succession around Happisburgh has now revealed several archaeological locations of Early Pleistocene and early Middle Pleistocene age with evidence of flint artefacts, cut-marked bones and footprints. Importantly, the sites are associated with a rich environmental record of flora and fauna allowing detailed reconstructions of the human habitats and the potential for preservation of organic artefacts. Continuing erosion of the coastline will reveal further exposures of the HHF and new sites, which promise to transform our understanding of the earliest human occupation of northern latitudes.*

“We’ll be continuing to work in the area as new information is revealed every time we visit,” he says. “Over the years we have built up a team of local people who walk the beaches on a far more regular basis and are excellent at reporting back any new discoveries, whether these be new sediments, artifacts or fossil bones.”

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Dr Nick Ashton, British Museum at the Happisburgh site. Dr Ashton is the Co-Director of the Happisburgh Project and the British Museum’s curator of the Palaeolithic collections. Photo: Happisburgh Project 

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Prof. Chris Stringer, a key author of the study report on the Happisburgh footprints. © Trustees of NHM: Professor Chris Stringer © Trustees of Natural History Museum

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*Ashton N, Lewis SG, De Groote I, Duffy SM, Bates M, et al. (2014) Hominin Footprints from Early Pleistocene Deposits at Happisburgh, UK. PLoS ONE 9(2): e88329. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0088329

Cover Photo, Top Left: Photograph of the footprint hollows in situ on the beach at Happisburgh, Norfolk. (Photo: Martin Bates).

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Stepping Out of Africa: Early Human Footprints in Arabia

Fossilized footprints provide evidence of a human presence in the Saudi Arabian desert about 120,000 years ago.

It must have been an astonishing moment when they first laid eyes on them. Here, on this arid, inhospitable landscape, they found fossilized footprints of humans that inhabited what is the present-day Nefud Desert in Saudi Arabia about 120,000 years ago. For the first time, the remarkable discovery provided direct supporting evidence for the presence of anatomically modern humans (AMH, or Homo sapiens) in a region suggested by some scientists to have been inhabited during early exodus dispersal episodes of humans out of Africa well before the date range thought by most archaeologists for the exit (about 60,000 years ago). 

Through investigative field efforts led by Mathew Stewart of the Max Planck Institutes for Chemical Ecology (MPI-CE), the research team, consisting of members from MPI-CE and the Science of Human History (MPI-SHH) in Jena, Germany and Royal Holloway University of London, UK, along with other partners, discovered the footprints along with numerous other large mammal footprint tracks in the Alathar ancient paleolake deposit located within the western Nefud desert. The geological deposit, like the desert that surrounds it, has been dry for tens of thousands of years. But at one time it formed the bed of a fresh water lake. The researchers surveyed two sections within a 1.8-meter-thick deposit of sandy-silt diatomite layer, which was overlaid by a layer formed by windblown sand. They uncovered a total of 376 tracks, which included 44 elephant, 107 camel, and 7 hominin footprints. The sediment in which the tracks were found was sandwiched between a younger sediment above and an older sediment below, dating the tracks to a time between 112,00 and 121,000 years ago. 

“We immediately realized the potential of these findings,” said Stewart. “Footprints are a unique form of fossil evidence in that they provide snapshots in time, typically representing a few hours or days, a resolution we tend not get from other records.” Similar striking snapshots on the spectrum of human evolution have been discovered, for example, at Laetoli in Tanzania and near Happisburgh in the UK.

Other than the human footprints, equally noteworthy were the elephant tracks, as elephants are thought to have gone extinct in the Levant to the west about 400 thousand years ago. According to team member and study author Michael Petraglia of MPI-SHH, the evidence for the presence of large mammals like elephants and water-loving hippos, along with the paleoenvironmental evidence for open grasslands and significant water resources such as lakes in Arabia at this ancient time, likely meant the region was a desirable place for animals, including humans, to pass through and inhabit as a kind of corridor region between Africa and Eurasia. In the case of Alathar, the findings suggest that the animals and humans were coming together to forage and survive around the ancient lake during a time of increasing aridification (drying) and diminishing water resources. “We know people visited the lake, but the lack of stone tools or evidence of the use of animal carcasses suggests that their visit to the lake was only brief,” says Stewart. 

Following the Green

The findings actually represent an event within a larger pattern of environmental fluctuations and animal and human movements over time in the region. “In the present day,” says Ash Parton of the University of Oxford, a specialist on palaeoenvironmental change, “monsoon rains only reach the very south-southwestern edges of the peninsula; however, palaeoclimatic evidence suggests that over the past 130,000 years there have been several periods in which these rains extended all the way into the desert interior. Utilizing a technique that allows researchers to know when individual grains of sand were buried (optically stimulated luminescence dating), findings suggest that the ‘greening of Arabia’ occurred approximately every 22,000 years between around 130,000 and 50,000 years ago. During these times drainage systems became active, leading to the expansion of large meandering rivers and the development of vast freshwater lakes, some of which were up to 2000 km². Palaeoenvironmental evidence from relict lake beds in what are now the hyper-arid Nefud and Rub al Khali deserts of Saudi Arabia, also shows that these large lakes were fringed with grasslands and trees, and home to a wide variety of fauna.”

The Gateway to Eurasia 

The species of human that moved through the region during this time period remains a matter of debate. Neanderthals were in Eurasia at the time. But the archaeological record thus far does not support their presence in Arabia during this period, and the record for modern human habitation of the Levant region just to the west dates back to about 180,000 years ago. “It is only after the last interglacial with the return of cooler conditions that we have definitive evidence for Neanderthals moving into the region,” says Stewart. “The footprints, therefore, most likely represent [anatomically modern] humans, or Homo sapiens.”  

The footprints are located within what many scientists suggest was a ‘gateway’ between Africa and Eurasia, a possible general route for the dispersal of modern humans out of Africa and into the rest of the world. Although the earliest fossils of AMH discovered outside of Africa date to about 210,000 years ago in southern Greece and 180,000 years ago in the Levant, the exit routes they took from Africa into Eurasia have remained largely unknown and a topic of scholarly debate. But it is clear that investigations in Arabia will continue to play a prominent role in the debate. “Every new site being discovered in Arabia reveals remarkable new information which makes it a very exciting time to be working in the area,” said Huw Groucutt, an archaeologist and paleoanthropologist currently with the MPI-SHH who has been conducting research and working at sites in Saudi Arabia for years. “We are confident that……..we will make some major discoveries. We are also keen to see archaeological data emphasized when it seems that many archaeologists have been living in the shadow of genetics interpretations over recent years. Yet archaeological data is the only record of how humans were behaving in particular times and places, so we are trying to restore the balance to the subjects contributing to the story of modern human origins.” Thus the Alathar footprints, maintain Stewart and his colleagues, make an important contribution to the search for early movements of AMH out of Africa into the Eurasian continent.

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View of the edge of the Alathar ancient lake deposit and surrounding landscape. Klint Janulis

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Researchers surveying the Alathar ancient lake deposit. Palaeodeserts Project

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The first human footprint discovered at Alathar and its corresponding digital elevation model (DEM). Stewart et al., 2020

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Above and below: First human footprints discovered at the Alathar ancient lake. Klint Janulis

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Article sources: SCIENCE ADVANCES and MAX PLANCK INSTITUTE FOR THE SCIENCE OF HUMAN HISTORY press releases, and The First Arabians, published June 5, 2014 in Popular Archaeology Magazine. Above article published previously on September 17, 2020 in Popular Archaeology.

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Trackways of Otero

The latest unequivocal evidence of a human presence more than 20,000 years ago in present-day New Mexico may help confirm a changing paradigm on the early settling of the Americas.

Anyone who visits White Sands National Park in south central New Mexico cannot help but marvel at the stark yet uniquely beautiful, undulating formations of white, rich gypsum crystal sand dunes that make it stand out from most any other arid landscape on the planet. It is what draws its thousands of visitors every year. It spreads over 145,762 acres or 227.8 square miles within the Tularosa Basin, a vast geologic graben that lies between the Sacramento Mountains to the east and the San Andres and Oscura Mountains to the west. White Sands is the largest of its kind anywhere on Earth, its gypsum sand depth extending as much as 30 feet and its dunes reaching a hight as much as 60 feet —  a mass of 4.1 billion metric tons. Despite its aridity, among its dunes live mammal populations of fox, rodents, coyotes, bobcats, badgers, rabbits, and porcupines; along with seven species of amphibians; reptiles, including a variety of lizards and snakes; and 220 species of birds. Cacti, desert grasses, and even some trees and shrubs pockmark the landscape — tracks of small animals can even be seen leading from plant to plant.

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Aerial view of White Sands. Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain

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But rewind backward over 12,000 years, and one sees a very different world. During the late Pleistocene, before the end of the Last Glacial Maximum (or LGM), the land here was characterized by lakes, rivers and streams. Vegetation was significantly more lush. It supported such animal species as mammoth, giant ground sloth, and dire wolves, mammals now long extinct. We know this because teams of scientists and specialists have spent years in the region surveying, excavating, and studying recovered finds that attest to this ancient reality. One of many locations in the region has revealed evidence of a great ancient inland body of water known to paleoclimatologists and paleontologists as Lake Otero, the largest of several lakes that characterized the Tularosa Basin between 36,000 and 19,000 years ago. Here, on what is today a dried up ancient lakebed known as a playa, teams of paleontologists and other specialists have revealed evidence for extinct late Pleistocene fauna such as mammoth, groundsloth, canid and felid carnivora (such as the dire wolf and the saber-toothed cat), bovids and camelids (such as ancient cattle species and ancient camels).

In January of 2020, one team of scientists uncovered something quite remarkable at a site they designated WHSA (White Sands) Locality 2 ………..

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Artist recreation of late Pleistocence landscape in present-day White Sands National Park. Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain

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An Extraordinary Trackway Exposed

It was in 2019 when a research team consisting of a core group of specialists—Dan Odess and David Bustos from the National Park Service, Kathleen Springer and Jeff Pagati from the US Geological Survey, Tommy Urban from Cornell University, and Matthew Bennet of Bournemouth University, discovered what appeared to be human footprints among those of what they knew to be extinct megafauna. Battling arid conditions and windblown sand, in January of 2020 they meticulously excavated and eventually revealed human, proboscidean (such as mammoths), and canid (such as dire wolf) footprints in all layers or levels throughout their trenching. But of particular interest were the human tracks — no less than 61 in all — showing, according to the researchers, “good anatomical definition”, meaning they exhibited good heel impressions, toe pads and longitudinal arch definition consistent with modern Homo sapiens footprints as well as human footprints documented at other Pleistocene sites across the world. Most important, the team was able to establish a controlled chronology for the footprints by dating their sediment context using radiocarbon ages of sediment samples containing macroscopic seeds of the aquatic plant Ruppia cirrhosa (from beds of ditch grass seeds) which sandwiched the relevant footprint-bearing layers. The dating sequence yielded calibrated ages from 22.86 ± 0.32 to 21.13 ± 0.25 ka.*

In other words, there may have been humans at this location 23,000 years ago, and perhaps even earlier.

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David Bustos excavating at site WHSA 2. Bustos initially discovered the tracks. Courtesy Matthew Bennett

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Team members at work on the site. Courtesy David Bustos.

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Team member works to define a human footprint at the site. Courtesy David Bustos

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One of the excavation trenches. Note the human fossil footprints nearby. Courtesy David Bustos.

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The base of the trench, showing footprints. Courtesy David Bustos.

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Human fossil print trackway. Courtesy David Bustos.

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Human fossil footprint tracks at the site. Courtesy Dan Flores.

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Human fossil footprint tracks at the site. Courtesy David Bustos.

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Human fossil footprint closeup. Courtesy Matthew Bennett.

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One of the oldest tracks at the site. Courtesy Matthew Bennett.

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“We had discovered human tracks at White Sands before so it was not a big surprise,” said Matthew Bennett, a lead researcher and ichnologist at the site. Among footprints they have previously discovered at White Sands and analyzed was a trackway, now considered the longest prehistoric human trackway ever found (measured at over 1.5 kilometers in length), that tells the story of a woman with a young child, perhaps a toddler, walking in a straight path at an average pace of about 1.7 meters per second — a rather determined clip. For much of her journey she carried the child. At other points along the way she had apparently let the child down to walk as she made adjustments or allowed for some rest, as the tracks showed the child walking about on its own. Equally remarkable, analysis of the trackway indicates the same woman and child returning along the same path and direction. A sloth and a mammoth had apparently crossed the human footprint trackway between the outward and return journeys. In another White Sands discovery and subsequent study, the researchers relate a story of a prehistoric sloth hunt. During that investigation, they discovered human tracks embedded within sloth prints, suggesting that humans had stepped into the sloth prints while possibly stalking them. The presence of “flailing circle” prints by the sloth indicated it rose up on its hind legs and swung its forelegs — a behavior that would match the act of defending itself with sweeping movements against attackers. Comparing this to the usual straight-line trackways for sloths when human trackways were not present, and those where changes in direction were observed when human tracks were present, the researchers were able to hypothesize a hunting scene.

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Artist conception of prehistoric woman with child traversing the landscape, based on analysis of fossil human footprints at White Sands National Park. Karen Carr

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But the implications of the latest discovery at WHSA site 2 were potentially game-changing: Scientists had arguable evidence that humans were actually present in North America during the Last Glacial Maximum, when ice sheets were thought to have provided a convincing barrier to human entry into the Americas from what DNA evidence has suggested to be their ancestral homelands in Asia, west of the Bering Land Bridge, or ancient Beringia. (It was through Beringia that many scientists suggest that humans crossed to reach the Americas). Even the coastal route from Asia to the Americas is thought to have been very difficult to navigate during LGM times. 

Bennett and his colleagues are confident about their finding. “The icing on the cake here,” adds Bennett, “is that we can date these traces accurately using beds of ditch grass seeds.”**

 

Given what has been excavated thus far, site investigators have been able to piece together a preliminary hypothetical picture of the size, composition and activity of the group of humans at the location.

“The track sample is quite small but currently it looks to be composed of teens and children with a few adults,” says Bennett. They “give a picture of what was taking place, teenagers interacting with younger children and adults. We can think of our ancestors as quite functional, hunting and surviving, but what we see here is also activity of play, and of different ages coming together.”**

According to Dr Sally Reynolds, a mammalian palaeontologist at Bournemouth University, the discovery also gives us a broader view of these humans in their ecological context.

“It is an important site because of all of the trackways we’ve found there show an interaction of humans in the landscape alongside extinct animals like mammoths and giant sloths,” she says. “We can see the co-existence between humans and animals on the site as a whole, and by being able to accurately date these footprints, we’re building a greater picture of the landscape.”**

But, says Bennett, ”we need more tracks to say more.” Plans were made to return to the site to continue excavations in January of 2022.

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Examining the seed layers. Courtesy David Bustos.

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Above and below: Artist depiction of Pleistocene scene at White Sands National Park site. Karen Carr.

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The timeline and site significance. Courtesy Matthew Bennett

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A Shifting Paradigm

The broadly accepted view about when and how the first Americans entered the Americas has revolved in part around the changes in the glacial periods associated with the last glacial period of the Ice Age. Since about 40,000 B.P., the Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets covered much of Canada. However, during the warmer interglacial periods they retreated to create ice-free corridors along the Pacific coast and areas east of the Rocky Mountains of Canada. Scientists have long suggested that it was through these corridors that humans were likely able to cross Beringia into the Americas. Beringia was a land bridge as much as 1,000 miles wide that joined present-day Alaska and eastern Siberia at various times 110,000 to 10,000 years ago. Exactly when and how this crossing may have occurred has been a matter of debate for decades.

Taken together, new discoveries and research results are beginning to paint a picture of a human beginning in the Americas that is considerably more complex and likely earlier than previously thought. An increasing number of sites in North and South America are now suggested by many scientists to have yielded a human presence well before 13,000 years ago — sites such as Meadowcroft in Pennsylvania, Cooper’s Ferry in Idaho, Friedkin in Texas, Paisley Caves in Oregon, Manis in Washington, Page-Ladson in Florida, Huaca Prieta in Peru, Chiquihuite cave in Mexico, Monte Verde in Chile, Bluefish caves (as much as 24,000 years ago) in Canada, and the latest case where scientists discovered evidence of human work on extinct giant ground sloth bones at the site of Santa Elina rock shelter in Brazil, dated to at least 25,000 years ago. Many of these cases, however, are not without scholarly debate. One controversial case, in fact, revolves around a discovery made near San Diego, where the remains of a 130,000-year-old mastodon are suggested by the site investigators to be associated with simple stone human tools.

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Stone tool found below the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) layer at Chiquihuite Cave, where stone tools suggested to be between 18,000 and 26,000 years old were discovered. Ciprian Ardelean, from America’s Ice Age Hunters, Popular Archaeology, October 23, 2020.

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Horse mandible from Bluefish cave shows a number of cut marks on the lingual surface. They show the animal’s tongue was cut out with a stone tool. Credit: Université de Montréal, The first humans arrived in North America a lot earlier than believed, January 16, 2017.

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Some genetic studies have shown that a single original population of modern humans dispersed from southern Siberia toward the Bering Land Bridge, or ancient Beringia, as early as about 30,000 years ago, and more dispersals from Beringia to the Americas by perhaps 16,500 years ago, with some groups traversing the Americas back into Asia. From the paleoclimate evidence, we see indications that the environmental stage was set by at least 16,300 years ago for an accommodating passage for humans into the Americas. From archaeology, we know that humans appeared south of the Canadian ice sheets by at least 15,000 years ago, 2,000 or more years before the emergence and spread of the Clovis culture, and it is no longer tenable that there is a clear linear evolutionary relationship between the Clovis culture and early technology discovered in the western regions of the North American continent. Finally, from archaeology, evidence builds to support a suggested route along the deglaciated north Pacific coastline.

But few discoveries in recent years have provided a more convincing attestation to the argument for a much earlier entry and settlement of the Americas than the recent excavation and dating of human footprints at WHSA site 2 at White Sands.

Bennett states that there is much more work to do at or near the site.

“[We need to] extend the sequence both up and down sections to look for the total duration of visitation/occupation and expand the track sample.  Also, [we need to] use some other dating techniques to build community confidence in the findings.” 

Sealing the Claim

The adage, “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence” is a popular statement among scholarly skeptics when it comes to discoveries or conclusions within the scientific community that fall outside the known and generally accepted paradigms. It thus goes without saying that, even while the ink was still drying on the published report of the team’s findings, scientists and scholars alike began debating the accuracy of the dating. The main argument centered around the contention that the ancient Ruppia cirrhosa seeds used could have been affected by old carbon reservoir effects that could skew the actual radiocarbon ages, making them appear chronologically earlier than they actually are. 

Bennett and colleagues had already anticipated the debate.

“We always knew that we would have to independently evaluate the accuracy of our ages to convince the archaeological community that the peopling of the Americas occurred far earlier than traditionally thought,” stated team member Jeff Pigati through a recent news release of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.***

Thus Bennett, Pigati, and Springer, et al. returned to the site and the same sediments and stratigraphic levels of the Ruppia seeds to collect new data. This time, they removed samples of terrestrial conifer pollen (conifer pollen fixes atmospheric carbon, which is not affected by old carbon reservoir effects). They also sampled sediments for optically simulated luminescence (OSL) dating. After submission for independent testing, the results showed a calibrated age range of 23.4 ± 2.5 – 22.6 ± 2.3 thousand years ago for the conifer pollen and a minimum age of 21.5 ± 1.9 thousand years ago for the OSL testing on the sediment samples. These results generally supported and resolved the date ranges obtained previously from the Ruppia cirrhosa seeds. 

Springer summed it up conclusively as reported in the AAAS news release:

“our new ages, combined with the strong geologic, hydrologic, and stratigraphic evidence, unequivocally support the conclusion that humans were present in North America during the last Glacial Maximum.”***

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Artist depiction of prehistoric scene at Pleistocene Lake Otero site. Karen Carr

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*Evidence of humans in North America during the Last Glacial Maximum, Matthew R. Bennett, David Bustos, Jeffrey S. Pigati, Kathleen B. Springer, Thomas M. Urban, Vance T. Holliday, Sally C. Reynolds, Marcin Budka, Jeffrey S. Honke, Adam M. Hudson, Brendan Fenerty, Clare Connelly, Patrick J. Martinez, Vincent L. Santucci ,Daniel Odess, Science, 373 (6562), • DOI: 10.1126/science.abg7586

**Earliest evidence of human activity found in the Americas, University of Arizona and Bournemouth University, September 23, 2021.

***New, independent ages confirm antiquity of ancient human footprints at White Sands, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 05-Oct.-2023.

****Jeffrey S. Pigati et al., Independent age estimates resolve the controversy of ancient human footprints at White Sands.Science 382,73-75(2023).DOI:10.1126/science.adh5007

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