homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Ancient footprints prove that humans were in Arabia 120,000 years ago

These early hunter-gatherers also walked alongside ancient elephants and camels.

Tibi Puiu
September 23, 2020 @ 11:03 pm

share Share

Credit: Griffith University.

As early humans began their long and arduous migrations out of their cradle in Africa, they inevitably had to pass through the Levant. This region at the eastern end of the Mediterranean is at the crossroads between Africa, Asia, and Europe. Some of these pioneering hunter-gatherer groups went north, others headed west, and others still wandered east, through the Arabian Peninsula. Evidence of the latter migratory path has been recently documented in a new study that described 120,000-year-old footprints, which mark the oldest evidence of a human presence in Arabia.

The oldest evidence of humans in Arabia

The seven ancient footprints were etched by two or three people who walked along the shore of a shallow lake in northern Saudi Arabia. During the Pleistocene, the Arabian Peninsula was almost unrecognizable. Instead of deserts and arid landscapes, Arabia was actually much wetter than it is today. Ancient hunter-gatherers would have trekked through grasslands and woods that were crossed by rivers and lakes, such as the one in the western Nefud Desert where the ancient footprints were studied by paleontologists at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Germany and Griffith University in Australia.

Intriguingly, besides human footprints, the researchers also identified 369 footprints etched by an assortment of other different creatures.

“Of those, elephants and camels were the most abundant, yet there was also buffalo and horses in the area at that time,” says Julien Louys, co-author of the study and a researcher at Griffith University’s Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution (ARCHE). “It was only the presence of freshwater lakes in the region that made the area so habitable for such a diverse community of elephants, camels, oryx, horses, buffaloes and humans.”

Both humans and local beasts likely came to the lake to drink and forage before moving on. Luckily for science, some of the tracks left in the mud have been fossilized.

Credit: Science Advances.

Using optically stimulated luminescence, researchers at Max Planck were able to date the layers of sediments just above and below the footprints. Rather than measuring the concentration of isotopes of carbon, this novel dating method involves shining light on sediment samples. The photons excite atoms in quartz grains trapped in the sediment, releasing electrons and photons in the process. By measuring the photons, the researchers were able to tell how long ago a sediment was exposed to light — that’s sometime between 122,000 and 121,000 year ago.

Although human presence in the area was sparse around that time, this timeline helps to patch up some holes in the current established narrative of the earliest human migrations out of Africa.

“In human migration out of Africa there is evidence of early humans older than 100,000 years in the Near East (Israel) and in Asia, but until now we have had no evidence of what happened in Arabia; the area in between,” says Mathieu Duval, an author of the study. “So this discovery in the region dated to within the last interglacial period fills a significant knowledge gap in our understanding of the origin and dispersal of our species.”

The findings were reported in the journal Science Advances.

share Share

A Dutch 17-Year-Old Forgot His Native Language After Knee Surgery and Spoke Only English Even Though He Had Never Used It Outside School

He experienced foreign language syndrome for about 24 hours, and remembered every single detail of the incident even after recovery.

Your Brain Hits a Metabolic Cliff at 43. Here’s What That Means

This is when brain aging quietly kicks in.

Scientists Just Found a Hidden Battery Life Killer and the Fix Is Shockingly Simple

A simple tweak could dramatically improve the lifespan of Li-ion batteries.

Westerners cheat AI agents while Japanese treat them with respect

Japan’s robots are redefining work, care, and education — with lessons for the world.

Scientists Turn to Smelly Frogs to Fight Superbugs: How Their Slime Might Be the Key to Our Next Antibiotics

Researchers engineer synthetic antibiotics from frog slime that kill deadly bacteria without harming humans.

This Popular Zero-Calorie Sugar Substitute May Be Making You Hungrier, Not Slimmer

Zero-calorie sweeteners might confuse the brain, especially in people with obesity

Any Kind of Exercise, At Any Age, Boosts Your Brain

Even light physical activity can sharpen memory and boost mood across all ages.

A Brain Implant Just Turned a Woman’s Thoughts Into Speech in Near Real Time

This tech restores speech in real time for people who can’t talk, using only brain signals.

Using screens in bed increases insomnia risk by 59% — but social media isn’t the worst offender

Forget blue light, the real reason screens disrupt sleep may be simpler than experts thought.

We Should Start Worrying About Space Piracy. Here's Why This Could be A Big Deal

“We are arguing that it’s already started," say experts.