Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ancient footprints reveal humans stalked giant seven-foot sloths 11,000 years ago

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BOURNEMOUT­H, (Reuters) - Scientists have uncovered evidence of ancient humans engaged in a deadly face- off with a giant sloth, showing for the first time how our ancestors might have tackled such a formidable prey.

Standing over two metres tall, with forelegs tipped with claws, giant sloths lived until around 11,000 years ago. Most scientists believe over-hunting by humans eventually led to their extinction.

Fossilised footprints in the salt flats of White Sands National Monument, in the southweste­rn U.S. state of New Mexico, reveal humans walking in the exact footsteps of a giant sloth and then confrontin­g it, possibly hurling spears.

“The story that we can read from the tracks is that the humans were stalking; following in the footsteps, precisely in the footsteps of the sloth,” said Matthew Bennett, one of a team of scientists behind the discovery.

“While it was being distracted and turning, somebody else would come across and try and deliver the killer blow. It's an interestin­g story and it's all written in the footprints,” said Bennett, a professor of environmen­tal and geographic­al sciences at Bournemout­h University in southern England.

At the White Sands National Monument, researcher­s identified what are known as “flailing circles” that show the rise of the sloth on its hind legs and the swing of its fore legs, likely in a defensive motion.

In addition to tracks of humans stalking the sloth, there are more human tracks further away. From this, scientists infer that the humans worked as a group, with a separate team distractin­g and misdirecti­ng the sloth to outwit it.

The flailing circles are always associated with the presence of human tracks. Where there are no human footprints, the sloths walk in straight lines, but where human tracks are present the sloth trackways show evasion, with sudden changes in direction.

Thanks to new 3D modelling techniques, the fossilised footprints have been preserved using a system developed by Bennett. Using a standard digital camera to take images from 22 different angles, his computer algorithm builds up an ultra-precise 3D rendering of the footprint.

 ??  ?? How human hunters stalked giant ground sloth
How human hunters stalked giant ground sloth

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