The Guardian (USA)

Neandertha­l footprints found in France offer snapshot of their lives

- Kim Willsher and agencies

Scientists have found hundreds of perfectly preserved footprints, providing evidence that Neandertha­ls walked the Normandy coast in France.

The prints suggest a group of 10-13 individual­s, mostly children and adolescent­s, were on the shoreline 80,000 years ago.

Neandertha­ls, the closest evolutiona­ry cousins to present-day humans and primates, have long been thought to have lived in social groups, but details have been hard to establish.

The 257 footprints discovered at Le Rozel in western France give a snapshot of how Neandertha­ls lived and suggest they may have been taller than previously thought.

Jérémy Duveau, a co-author of a study published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, said the prints were left in muddy soil and quickly preserved by wind-driven sand.

“It was incredible to observe these tracks, which represent moments in the lives of individual­s, sometimes very young, who lived 80,000 years ago,” said Duveau, of the French National Museum of Natural History.

The site was discovered by Yves Roupin, an amateur archaeolog­ist, in the 1960s, but it was not until 2012, when it was threatened by wind and tidal erosion, that government-funded excavation­s started.

Mechanical diggers were used to extract sand tens of metres down to reach lower layers where the footprints were delicately uncovered with brushes.

The footprints were found among what the team called “abundant archaeolog­ical material” revealing evidence of animal butchery and toolmaking. They date back to a time when only Neandertha­ls lived in western Europe.

Neandertha­ls’ feet were broader than those of modern humans. From the size of the footprints at Le Rozel, the researcher­s estimated the size of the individual­s who made them and then inferred their age.

Some of the prints appear to have been made by a taller individual. Remains of skeletons previously suggested Neandertha­ls were around 150– 160cm tall, but this individual may have measured 175cm (5ft 9in).

Rapidly preserved footprints enable archaeolog­ists to better estimate social group sizes than fossilised remains that can accumulate in one site over time. “They record a kind of snapshot into the lives of individual­s over a very short period,” Duveau said.

“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 findings have raised questions about why there appear to have been so few adults present.

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. Many of the prints were lifted from the site to be preserved elsewhere.

Those that were not extracted were destroyed by the wind, Duveau said. “The conservati­on of footprints requires a sort of miracle: we have to get very, very lucky.”

Before Le Rozel, only nine confirmed sets of Neandertha­l footprints had been found, in Greece, Romania, Gibraltar and France.

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

 ?? Photograph: Dominique Cliquet/AFP/Getty Images ?? The excavation site of the footprint layer in Le Rozel, France.
Photograph: Dominique Cliquet/AFP/Getty Images The excavation site of the footprint layer in Le Rozel, France.
 ?? Photograph: Dominique Cliquet/AFP/Getty Images ?? One of the Neandertha­l footprints discovered at Le Rozel, France.
Photograph: Dominique Cliquet/AFP/Getty Images One of the Neandertha­l footprints discovered at Le Rozel, France.

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