Nearly 6 Million year old Footprints found in Greece say Europeans did NOT Originate from Africa

Home » Archaeology, Europe » Nearly 6 Million year old Footprints found in Greece say Europeans did NOT Originate from Africa

 

 

A trail of 5.7 million-year-old fossil footprints discovered in Crete could upend the widely accepted theories on early human evolution.

The new prints have a distinctly human-like form, with a similar big toe to our own and a ‘ball’ in the sole that’s not found in apes.

But, the researchers say the prints found on the Greek island were created during a time when it’s thought early human ancestors were still in Africa – and, when they still had ape-like feet.

‘What makes this controversial is the age and location of the prints,’ says Professor Per Ahlberg at Uppsala University, one of the authors on the new study.

Studies in recent decades have led to the conclusion that all fossil human-ancestors older than 1.8 million years lived and evolved in Africa.

The new fossil footprints are not the oldest hominin evidence to be found, but they could drive a wedge in the timeline of evolution.

It’s thought that human ancestors of the last few million years directly derived from a genus known as Ardipithecus.

And, as a set of ‘reasonably complete’ 4.4 million-year-old Ardipithecus ramidus fossils discovered in Ethiopia was found to have an ape-like foot, it was thought that the human-like foot had not yet evolved by that time.

Several other fossil discoveries in South and East Africa have further supported the idea that the evolution of human bipedalism took place on the continent, including the 3.7 million-year-old Laetoli footprints from Tanzania, which provide evidence of human-like feet and upright locomotion.

According to the new study, however, the new footprints discovered in Trachilos have an ‘unmistakably human-like form.’

‘The interpretation of these footprints is potentially controversial,’ the authors wrote in the study, published to the journal Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association.

‘The print morphology suggests that the trackmaker was a basal member of the clade Hominini, but as Crete is some distance outside the known geographical range of pre-Pleistocene hominins we must also entertain the possibility that they represent a hitherto unknown late Miocene primate that convergently evolved human-like foot anatomy.’

The prints were found in a type of sedimentary rock that formed when the Mediterranean Sea briefly dried out, 5.6 million years ago.

This knowledge, coupled with dating methods based on marine microfossils, indicates that the prints are about 5.7 million years old.

The best-preserved prints are shown above, alongside 3D scans.

The shape of the fossil prints suggests the suspected hominin who left them was more primitive than the Laetoli.

The foot is proportionately shorter, though it shares the same general form.

While the Trachilos prints were created on the sandy shore of the Mediterranean, the Laetoli tracks were made in volcanic ash.

The researchers now say that during this time, before modern day Crete detached from the Greek mainland or the Sahara Desert even existed, early hominins could have lived across southeast Europe as well as Africa.

‘This discovery challenges the established narrative of early human evolution head-on and is likely to generate a lot of debate,’ said Per Ahlberg.

‘Whether the human origins research community will accept fossil footprints as conclusive evidence of the presence of hominins in the Miocene of Crete remains to be seen.’

According to the study, the new footprints discovered in Trachilos have an ‘unmistakably human-like form.’ But, they were created during a time when it’s thought early human ancestors were still in Africa – and, when they still had ape-like feet.

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