The longest trail of fossilized human footprints hints at a risky Ice Age trek

The more than 1.5-kilometer-long trail was made by a young adult carrying a toddler

Ice Age woman carrying a toddler illustration

The longest set of human footprints, dated to the Ice Age, were possibly made by a young woman carrying a toddler (illustrated). Additional prints hint that the duo crossed paths with a mammoth (two shown) and a ground sloth.

Karen Carr

On a day during the late Ice Age, a young adult or teen carrying a toddler hustled across a muddy flat where mammoths and giant sloths roamed. Now, over 10,000 years later, fossilized footprints reveal that possibly perilous journey.

The tracks, found in New Mexico’s White Sands National Park, stretch for more than 1.5 kilometers across the plain and back, making them the longest set ever found, researchers report in the Dec. 1 Quaternary Science Reviews.

“The length of the trackway is really exceptional and give us a prolonged window into the behavior of the individuals,” says evolutionary biologist Kevin Hatala of Chatham University in Pittsburgh, who was not involved in the research. It evokes a personal and intimate connection with our ancestors, as many people today can relate to the feeling of holding a child in their arms, he says.

Scientists stumbled across the find when, in 2018, they spied a continuous stretch of dark spots along what was once the shore of the ancient Lake Otero, now dried up. A little digging revealed fossilized human footprints as well as those from a mammoth and ground sloth.  

Of the 427 human footprints discovered, researchers analyzed 90. The size and the depth of the footprints suggest that they had been made by a teen or a young woman, the researchers say. Uneven prints hint that the surface was slippery and that on one leg of the journey, the person at times shifted a heavy load. That load appeared to be a child: Smaller prints from perhaps a 3-year-old appeared next to the larger footprints in several spots.

“It looks like the person was in a hurry, we don’t know why. It was a fast walk and looks like the person was tired… but kept going,” says David Bustos, a biologist at the White Sands National Park.

fossilized human footprints
A set of fossilized human footprints (closeup of one, right) found at White Sands National Park in New Mexico extend some 1.5 kilometers along what was once a lake. The person followed the same route out and back (left) during the late Ice Age.M.R. Bennett et al/Quaternary Science Reviews

That hurry might have been due to the riskiness of the journey. Previously found footprints from the area came from groups of people (SN: 4/25/18). They likely moved in groups to safely hunt animals such as mammoths, sloths and wolves, Bustos says.

In this case, footprints from a mammoth and ground sloth crisscrossed the human prints; in some spots, the human footprints came first while in others, the human stepped on the other animals’ tracks. Based on when those animals went extinct, researchers were able to broadly date the human footprints to the late Ice Age.  

While it is unclear if the mammoth sensed the human presence, the giant ground sloth rose onto its hind legs and moved in circles, suggesting that it knew that there was a human nearby, the researchers say. It’s possible that such animals were coming in contact with humans on a regular basis, Hatala says.  

Aayushi Pratap was a fall 2020 science writing intern. She has a master’s degree in science and health journalism from Columbia University, as well as degrees in biochemistry and zoology. Previously she worked as a health reporter with the Hindustan Times in Mumbai, India, covering public health.

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