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Footprints in the Snow: How Science Helped Turn Tragedy to Triumph

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That took 100 million years. Leaving behind dinosaur footprints to be found all along our coastline. Yeah. Oh, so you might leave a three-toed footprint behind. And we are no more than 25m away from your very first dinosaur footprints. The USGS team first dated the footprints by sampling ancient ditchgrass seeds ( Ruppia cirrhosa) from the levels just above and below them. Using radiocarbon dating, the team reached the surprising conclusion that humans had walked these shores roughly 21,130 to 22,860 years ago—thousands of years before most theories based on the archaeological record suggest that humans arrived in North America.

I applaud their efforts to try to resolve this issue,” he continues, “but my suspicion is that the ages that have been generated so far are older than what they truly are.” This is Scalby Bay near Scarborough in North Yorkshire and not many people know this but it's one of the best places in Britain to find something amazing that was made millions of years ago. The footprints of dinosaurs but first we need to find some. Just like coincidence. Maybe we need to find some more and then we can be sure that it's definitely a dinosaur footprint and not just-- Let me feel. So it goes in like that-- Shall we try and get the water out? Here's what I'm thinking though - this could just be three dips in the ground couldn't it.Footprints can’t tell us who these prehistoric humans were. Yet a new study suggests something very surprising about this group. They were living in what’s now New Mexico likely during the Ice Age some 23,000 years ago—thousands of years earlier than the ancestors of modern Native Americans are generally believed to have arrived on the continent. So next thing is, sea level rose so our oceans came in and they started to bury our seabed even more and I've got a handy little demonstration here. So if you imagine this is our ocean And if I turn it upside down you can see that its full of sand OK? All of that sand floating around and eventually you can see it start to settle down to the bottom. Oh wow, look, yeah, dinosaur footprint. Look at that, so there's a big toe here in the middle. can you see that one? This is great because you can see the footprints very clearly now. So you can imagine a dinosaur stomping across the ground but Connor has come up with a question that I don't know the answer to. Connor what was your question? Some prints have been visible on the surface since at least the 1930s, but researchers uncovered a vast treasure trove of them by delving below the surface, carefully digging trenches in the park’s gypsum sands. The ground is terrible for bone preservation; gypsum eats away at bone fossils. But the same sands perfectly preserved footprints of the species that once called this landscape home.

Even after thousands of years, the striking array of footprints found in New Mexico’s White Sands National Park evokes a strong human connection between those who view them and those who made them. “The incredible stories they tell us could never be told with artifacts or fossil bones alone,” says study co-author Kathleen Springer, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). But when the climate shifted, a centuries-long drought began to rapidly shrink the lake, and the shorelines became surrounded by soft wetlands. Humans and animals frequented this area, and when it dried up, many thousands of their footprints became fossilized.So as that settles down we build up a layer actually down in our lid down here, if I move my hand it's a bit easier to see. We're gonna fill our lid up with the sand. There it comes you can see its coming up there. And that's what's happening in our ocean. So all of this is falling down to the sea bed USGS’s Springer says the study can only raise intriguing questions about who these people were, how they ended up at White Sands and what eventually happened to them. But, she notes, many more clues are likely awaiting discovery. The lake and its lush surrounding vegetation attracted not only humans but also many now-extinct species such as plant-eating ancient camels, mammoths and ground sloths. Predators, like American lions and dire wolves, enjoyed good living here as well. Our dinosaur was alive about 165 million years ago. That's so long ago, that the world was a very different place and what is now Scalby Bay, was, in those days, a tropical river bank.' We're gonna recreate a dinosaur footprint here, we've got our muddy riverbank and we've got our dinosaur foot. Scarlett, can you bring that in? Right, and then we need to stomp on it and create a footprint. Nice. Alright so lift it out. Let's see what we've got. Alright, we've got a nice footprint there.

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