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Prehistoric Americas
Possible Proof for the 40,000 BC Arrival
by Martin Redfern, BBC Radio Science, 16 January
2006
It was a sensational discovery - human footprints said to be
40,000 years old, preserved by volcanic ash in an abandoned quarry
in Mexico.
The announcement, in July last year, created a flurry of
excitement, but was then promptly dismissed by a second team of
researchers who re-dated the rocks at 1.3 million years old,
impossibly ancient to bear human traces.
The original claim has not gone away, however.
The first widespread evidence for the human occupation of North
America came from the town of Clovis in New Mexico.
The beautiful fluted stone spearpoints made by the Clovis people
are found on many sites and date back 11,500 years or so. They are
believed to have been left by people who crossed a land bridge that
once existed between Siberia and Alaska.
But there is an increasing body of evidence for earlier
occupation of the Americas, dating back to a time when the overland
route through the ice would have been impossible.
'Car park'
The best evidence probably comes from Monte Verde in Chile and
dates back at least 12,500 years. But to have reached so far south
by then, people must have entered the continent earlier still.
There have been many claims of earlier dates, but few have been
substantiated. So the announcement of 40,000-year-old footprints
from Mexico was greeted with scepticism and caution.
The markings in the quarry were first identified in 2003
It came from a team led by Silvia Gonzalez, a Mexican working at
Liverpool John Moores University (JMU), UK.
In 2003, she was visiting a site south of Puebla, about 100km
southeast of Mexico City.
It is a dry environment with many small volcanoes and, in the
distance, the smoking peak of Popocatepetl. She was hoping to find
the geological context of deposits that had yielded animal bones
showing possible butchery marks and dating back 20 or 30,000 years.
The researchers were looking for a vertical section through the
rocks in the side of a small quarry, but it was overgrown and strewn
with debris.
As they were about to give up, they noticed that the floor of
the quarry was made of a single layer of hardened volcanic ash
called the xalnene tuff. It looks a bit like a badly asphalted car
park.
'Mechanical' marks
Silvia Gonzalez had studied much younger human tracks in
Lancashire and thought she could see similar markings in the
volcanic ash.
"Suddenly, I began to see some marks on the top surface of the
ash... and I recognised them as human footprints," she said.
"I felt quite shocked, because I knew already that this ash was
very old."
At first, her colleagues laughed at her, but soon they were
brushing away the dust with excitement.
A large area of the quarry has now been cleared and the
researchers are making a detailed digital laser survey of the marks.
Some are clearly animal tracks left by perhaps deer and buffalo
and running for several metres.
Others do seem to resemble human footprints though there are few
in a continuous track. They are of several sizes suggesting both
adults and children.
The exposed quarry floor
The ash is too coarse to have left clear toe prints but some
certainly appear to be from left or right feet with a raised arch
and material bunched up behind the toes as the person pushed
forwards up the gentle slope.
Gonzalez' colleague at JMU, Professor Dave Huddart, demonstrated
the likeness to his own feet: "If I put my foot beside it, size 8½,
it looks a typical size; it's got the characteristic figure-of-eight
shape and the big toe is there, so it's a left foot."
Professor Mike Waters of Texas A&M University is sceptical. He
thinks the marks are products of the quarrying process and
subsequent erosion. There are certainly some marks at the site that
are very obviously due to that and seem much fresher - pick marks
and tracks from mechanical diggers.
'Complex' scenario
More controversial still are the dates. Colleagues of Silvia
Gonzalez at Oxford University used a technique called optically
stimulated luminescence (OSL) that records the last time rocks were
exposed to sunlight or heat.
That gave a variety of dates from the overlying sediments, but
when applied to small fragments of what looked like brick or burnt
clay within the volcanic ash, it produced a date of about 40,000
years.
The famous Popocatepetl volcano is visible in the distance
That initially shocked Dr Gonzalez as it implied by far the
earliest evidence of humans in the Americas. But it fitted in with
dates of up to 38,000 years based on carbon 14 in shells in the
sediments above.
In December, however, Paul Renne of the Berkley Geochronology
Center in California published dates for the volcanic ash itself
based on the powerful argon-argon technique.
That gave an age of 1.3 million years, far too old to be
compatible with human footprints.
"I don't think that they are [footprints]," he said. "There are
no trails of footprints that are consistent, the shapes don't really
look like footprints, and, most importantly, there's a huge
diversity of shapes, sizes and arrangements of these things."
Professor Renne measured the age of several different grains in
the ash and got the same age for each. Dr Gonzalez, though, says
that the volcano responsible is complex.
It interrupted explosively underneath a lake and lots of older
material and lake sediment may have been caught up in the ash,
distorting the date.
Further work
Furthermore, there do not seem to be the signs of erosion and
weathering that would be expected if there had been a gap of more
than a million years between the ash and the overlying sediments.
Professor Renne also looked at the magnetisation of the rocks,
partly to see if they might have been jumbled up and re-deposited
from an earlier material, which, he says, they were not.
But he did find that the magnetic polarity was the opposite of
the Earth's present magnetic field. The Earth's magnetic poles do
occasionally flip.
"The last time the Earth's magnetic field had consistently
reversed polarity was about 790,000 years ago, so the fact that we
found reversed polarity magnetisation in this rock tells us that
it's older than 790,000 years," he said.
Silvia Gonzalez' view? "We know that there are short-term
'excursions' of the magnetic field, and one of those happened 40,000
years ago, very interestingly."
Professor Renne: "How did I know they were going to say that?
There is a finite possibility that that is correct, but the
probability is extremely low."
It seems this debate really is going to run and run.
To answer the criticisms, Dr Gonzalez and her colleagues hope
now to get permission to excavate for further footprints that would
not be associated with any quarrying marks and to get more secure
and consistent dates for the rocks.
"That would convince even the most intense critics," she said.
"We need to talk to each other to make a continental model of human
migration across the Americas. It won't be done in a few years. It
will take a lifetime, but we are not afraid to do that.
If she succeeds, this little quarry could become one of the most
important archaeological sites in the Americas.
A final comment from Professor David Meltzer, from Southern
Methodist University, Dallas. He has researched and written
extensively on the subject of the "first Americans". He said: "I'm
not averse to the idea of 40 000-year-old people in the New World -
but I'm sceptical because we've been fooled before.
"We want to see it confirmed with all the evidence laid out so
that we're not buying in to something that isn't there."
The weight of evidence clearly seems to be mounting in favour of
that something actually being there. Only time will tell.
Possible Migration Routes
1: Kennewick Man remains are about 8,800 years old
2: Santa Island Rosa bones date back 10,960 years
3: Clovis site with stone spear points - 11,500 years ago
4: The Puebla 'footprints' are claimed at 40,000 years old
5: Peñon Woman III in California - 10,800 years ago