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Keyword: ditchgrass

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  • A Controversial Paper Claimed Humans Came to North America 23,000 Years Ago. It Just Got Backup.

    10/05/2023 5:43:13 PM PDT · by gnarledmaw · 63 replies
    Inverse ^ | ELANA SPIVACK
    In January 2020, Jeff Pigati and Kathleen Springer, both research geologists at the U.S. Geological Survey, went to New Mexico’s Tularosa Basin at White Sands National Park to see about some footprints. These weren’t just any footprints; the fossilized tracks represent the oldest human footprints in North America. What’s more, Tularosa Basin, about 20,000 years ago, was in the midst of what’s known as the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). During this chilly, final part of the Pleistocene Era, the global sea level was about 400 feet lower and glaciers covered 25 percent of Earth’s land. Their mission was to find...
  • Ancient Human Footprints in New Mexico Dated to Ice Age

    04/10/2022 9:03:35 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 28 replies
    The Scientist ^ | September 23, 2021 | Rachael Moeller Gorman
    Researchers excavated human footprints out of a small bluff next to a dried-up playa lake and radiocarbon-dated embedded seeds to around 23,000 years ago. Their results suggest that people entered the Americas thousands of years earlier than the accepted estimate....some of these prints could be tens of thousands of years old, making them potentially the best evidence yet that people reached the Americas far earlier than once believed. Radiocarbon dating of seeds surrounding the prints suggests that they were made during the Last Glacial Maximum, when massive ice sheets are thought to have blocked any passage from the Bering Land...
  • Etched in sands of time: ‘We knew they were old’ (Human footprints - oldest known humans in America 23,000 years ago)

    09/24/2021 11:13:26 AM PDT · by CedarDave · 15 replies
    The Albuquerque Journal ^ | September 23, 2021 | Ryan Boetel
    About 23,000 years ago, a group of children and teenagers left footprints along Lake Otero in what is now southern New Mexico – perhaps they were fetching water for adults hunting a mammoth or the massive ground sloth that roamed the area in those days. This week, a team of researchers from White Sands National Park, the National Parks Service and others published an article in the journal Science, which concludes that those children’s footprints were the oldest known human tracks ever found in North America. Imprints of the tiny toes were found along outcrops of the since-dried-up lake, which...
  • Fossil footprints show humans in North America more than 21,000 years ago

    09/24/2021 4:27:02 AM PDT · by BenLurkin · 25 replies
    nbc ^ | Sept. 23, 2021, 11:00 AM PDT
    The footprints at White Sands were dated by examining the seeds of an aquatic plant that once thrived along the shores of the dried-up lake, Ruppia cirrhosa, commonly known as ditchgrass. According to research published Thursday in the journal Science and co-authored by Bustos, the ancient ditchgrass seeds were found in layers of hard earth both above and below the many human footprints at the site, and they were radiocarbon-dated to determine their age. The tracks at one location have been revealed as both the earliest known footprints and the oldest firm evidence of humans anywhere in the Americas, showing...