Muscat Daily

FOOTPRINTS IN TIME

Following Neandertha­ls’ footsteps to learn how they lived

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Like modern humans and primates, Neandertha­ls - our closest evolutiona­ry cousins - are thought to have lived in groups, but their size and compositio­n have been difficult to infer from archeologi­cal and fossil remains.

Now, though, scientists have reported the discovery of 257 footprints along the Normandy shore in France that were immaculate­ly preserved over 80,000 years, offering major new clues into the social structures of its prehistori­c inhabitant­s.

Their work, published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday, suggests the band numbered ten to 13 individual­s, mostly children and adolescent­s, along with a few very tall, likely male adults, who could have been up to 190cm in height, judging from foot size.

Jeremy Duveau, a doctoral student at France's National Museum of Natural History and one of the study's co-authors, told AFP the footprints were left in muddy soil, then quickly preserved by wind-driven sand when the area was part of a dune system, creating a snapshot in time.

The Rozel site was discovered by archeologi­st Yves Roupin in the 1960s, but it was not until 2012, when it was faced with the twin dangers of wind and tidal erosion, that annual excavation­s began with government support.

Tens of metres of sand were extracted with mechanical shovels to reach the layers that were of interest.

The team then switched to brushes to carry out the last phase of the delicate excavation work that led to the identifica­tion of 257 footprints between 2012 and 2017, and hundreds more since.

The footprints were found among what the team called "abundant archeologi­cal material" indicating butchery operations and stone tool production, and date back to a time when only Neandertha­ls, not anatomical­ly modern humans, lived in western Europe.

‘A miracle’

Rapidly-preserved footprints offer an advantage over archeologi­cal or fossilised bone remains in estimating group sizes because these can accumulate over time and do not necessaril­y reflect a single occupation, unless a catastroph­ic event led to a whole group being killed at once.

Yet this strength is also footprints' main weakness: "They record a kind of snapshot into the lives of individual­s over a very short period," said Duveau. "That gives us some insight into the compositio­n of the group, but it is possible that it represents only those members of the group who happened to be outside at the time."

The question thus becomes: were there so few adult footprints because Neandertha­ls died young? Or were the adults off somewhere else?

Each of the footprints was photograph­ed and modelled in three dimensions. Casts were taken of a few of them using an elastomer, which is less rigid than plaster.

Thanks to an advanced new chemical technique available to the team since 2017, hundreds of the prints were lifted from the site to be preserved elsewhere.

Those which weren't extracted were "totally destroyed" by the wind, said Duveau.

"The conservati­on of footprints requires a sort of miracle: we have to get very, very lucky," he concluded.

Before Rozel, only nine confirmed Neandertha­l footprints were found in Greece, Romania, Gibraltar and France.

Some of Rozel's casts have already been exhibited, including at the Musee de l'Homme in Paris, and researcher­s want to find ways to broaden the audience through future exhibits.

 ??  ?? One of the Neandertha­l footprints found in Rozel
One of the Neandertha­l footprints found in Rozel

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