Human footprints provide snapshot of last interglacial ecology in the Arabian interior - PubMed
- ️Wed Jan 01 2020
. 2020 Sep 18;6(38):eaba8940.
doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aba8940. Print 2020 Sep.
Mathew Stewart 1 2 3 , Paul S Breeze 5 , Klint Janulis 6 , Ian Candy 7 , Simon J Armitage 7 8 , David B Ryves 9 , Julien Louys 10 , Mathieu Duval 10 11 , Gilbert J Price 12 , Patrick Cuthbertson 13 , Marco A Bernal 14 , Nick A Drake 5 2 , Abdullah M Alsharekh 15 , Badr Zahrani 16 , Abdulaziz Al-Omari 16 , Patrick Roberts 2 , Huw S Groucutt 17 2 3 , Michael D Petraglia 18 19 20
Affiliations
- PMID: 32948582
- PMCID: PMC7500939
- DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aba8940
Human footprints provide snapshot of last interglacial ecology in the Arabian interior
Mathew Stewart et al. Sci Adv. 2020.
Abstract
The nature of human dispersals out of Africa has remained elusive because of the poor resolution of paleoecological data in direct association with remains of the earliest non-African people. Here, we report hominin and non-hominin mammalian tracks from an ancient lake deposit in the Arabian Peninsula, dated within the last interglacial. The findings, it is argued, likely represent the oldest securely dated evidence for Homo sapiens in Arabia. The paleoecological evidence indicates a well-watered semi-arid grassland setting during human movements into the Nefud Desert of Saudi Arabia. We conclude that visitation to the lake was transient, likely serving as a place to drink and to forage, and that late Pleistocene human and mammalian migrations and landscape use patterns in Arabia were inexorably linked.
Copyright © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC).
Figures

(A) Map showing the location of the site within the western Nefud Desert, Saudi Arabia. (B) Three-dimensional oblique map of the site and location of tracks, fossils, and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) samples.

(A) LR04 stack (top) (blue line) displaying the marine δ18O record (62). (B) Dated evidence for H. sapiens occupation of the Levant and the western Nefud Desert based on fossil evidence. Ages for occupation of the Levant are based on thermoluminescence (TL) ages from Skhul (63) and Qafzeh (64); see (65) for more detailed discussion. Al Wusta lake and fossils represent the Bayesian modeled age for units 2 and 3 (carbonate lake sediment and waterlain sands) (4). (C) OSL ages for the two lake samples from Alathar between which the hominin and faunal footprints lie (this study). (D) Summer insolation at 30°N (bottom) (orange line) (66).

The first section (bottom) (units 1 to 4b) lies stratigraphically below the second section (top) (units 5 to 7). The two sections were located ~30-m apart (see “OSL samples and strat logs” in Fig. 1), and the stratigraphic relationship between them is easily traced in the field. All footprints are located on the top of the first section (unit 4b) but beneath the second section. Photo credit: Richard Clark-Wilson, Royal Holloway, University of London.

Photo credit: Klint Janulis, University of Oxford.

(A) Plan view of the Alathar paleolake deposits with researchers indicated by white arrowheads. (B) First stratigraphic section (units FS1 to FS3). (C) Second stratigraphic section (units SS1 to SS3) overlying the first but located toward the center of the paleolake. (D and E) Example of an elephant track and trackway, Proboscipeda isp. (F) Camelid trackway, Lamaichnum isp. (G) Camelid forefoot (H) Camelid hindfoot. (I) Equid track, Hippipeda isp. (J) Bovid axis vertebra eroding out of the paleolake sediment. Photo credit: Gilbert Price, The University of Queensland and Richard Clark-Wilson, Royal Holloway, University of London.
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