Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South Africa

Three new Pleistocene hominin tracksites have been identified on the Cape south coast of South Africa, one in the Garden Route National Park and two in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, probably dating to Marine Isotope Stage 5. As a result, southern Africa now boasts six hominin tracksites, which are collectively the oldest sites in the world that are attributed to Homo sapiens. The tracks were registered on dune surfaces, now preserved in aeolianites. Tracks of varying size were present at two sites, indicating the presence of more than one trackmaker, and raising the possibility of family groups. A total of 18 and 32 tracks were recorded at these two sites, respectively. Ammoglyphs were present at one site. Although track quality was not optimal, and large aeolianite surface exposures are rare in the region, these sites prove the capacity of coastal aeolianites to yield such discoveries, and they contribute to what remains a sparse global hominin track record. It is evident that hominin tracks are more common in southern Africa than was previously supposed. SIGNIFICANCE: • Three new Pleistocene hominin trackways have been identified on the Cape south coast, bringing the number of known fossil hominin tracksites in southern Africa to six. • The tracks were all registered on dune surfaces, now preserved as aeolianites. • These are the six oldest tracksites in the world that are attributed to Homo sapiens. • Hominin tracks are more common in southern Africa than was previously supposed.

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Main Authors: Helm,Charles W., Lockley,Martin G., Cawthra,Hayley C., De Vynck,Jan C., Dixon,Mark G., Helm,Carina J.Z., Thesen,Guy H.H.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2020
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532020000600012
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spelling oai:scielo:S0038-235320200006000122020-10-14Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South AfricaHelm,Charles W.Lockley,Martin G.Cawthra,Hayley C.De Vynck,Jan C.Dixon,Mark G.Helm,Carina J.Z.Thesen,Guy H.H. Homo sapiens fossil tracks aeolianites southern Africa Pleistocene Three new Pleistocene hominin tracksites have been identified on the Cape south coast of South Africa, one in the Garden Route National Park and two in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, probably dating to Marine Isotope Stage 5. As a result, southern Africa now boasts six hominin tracksites, which are collectively the oldest sites in the world that are attributed to Homo sapiens. The tracks were registered on dune surfaces, now preserved in aeolianites. Tracks of varying size were present at two sites, indicating the presence of more than one trackmaker, and raising the possibility of family groups. A total of 18 and 32 tracks were recorded at these two sites, respectively. Ammoglyphs were present at one site. Although track quality was not optimal, and large aeolianite surface exposures are rare in the region, these sites prove the capacity of coastal aeolianites to yield such discoveries, and they contribute to what remains a sparse global hominin track record. It is evident that hominin tracks are more common in southern Africa than was previously supposed. SIGNIFICANCE: • Three new Pleistocene hominin trackways have been identified on the Cape south coast, bringing the number of known fossil hominin tracksites in southern Africa to six. • The tracks were all registered on dune surfaces, now preserved as aeolianites. • These are the six oldest tracksites in the world that are attributed to Homo sapiens. • Hominin tracks are more common in southern Africa than was previously supposed.Academy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science v.116 n.9-10 20202020-10-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532020000600012en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-za
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region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Helm,Charles W.
Lockley,Martin G.
Cawthra,Hayley C.
De Vynck,Jan C.
Dixon,Mark G.
Helm,Carina J.Z.
Thesen,Guy H.H.
spellingShingle Helm,Charles W.
Lockley,Martin G.
Cawthra,Hayley C.
De Vynck,Jan C.
Dixon,Mark G.
Helm,Carina J.Z.
Thesen,Guy H.H.
Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South Africa
author_facet Helm,Charles W.
Lockley,Martin G.
Cawthra,Hayley C.
De Vynck,Jan C.
Dixon,Mark G.
Helm,Carina J.Z.
Thesen,Guy H.H.
author_sort Helm,Charles W.
title Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South Africa
title_short Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South Africa
title_full Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South Africa
title_fullStr Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Newly identified hominin trackways from the Cape south coast of South Africa
title_sort newly identified hominin trackways from the cape south coast of south africa
description Three new Pleistocene hominin tracksites have been identified on the Cape south coast of South Africa, one in the Garden Route National Park and two in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, probably dating to Marine Isotope Stage 5. As a result, southern Africa now boasts six hominin tracksites, which are collectively the oldest sites in the world that are attributed to Homo sapiens. The tracks were registered on dune surfaces, now preserved in aeolianites. Tracks of varying size were present at two sites, indicating the presence of more than one trackmaker, and raising the possibility of family groups. A total of 18 and 32 tracks were recorded at these two sites, respectively. Ammoglyphs were present at one site. Although track quality was not optimal, and large aeolianite surface exposures are rare in the region, these sites prove the capacity of coastal aeolianites to yield such discoveries, and they contribute to what remains a sparse global hominin track record. It is evident that hominin tracks are more common in southern Africa than was previously supposed. SIGNIFICANCE: • Three new Pleistocene hominin trackways have been identified on the Cape south coast, bringing the number of known fossil hominin tracksites in southern Africa to six. • The tracks were all registered on dune surfaces, now preserved as aeolianites. • These are the six oldest tracksites in the world that are attributed to Homo sapiens. • Hominin tracks are more common in southern Africa than was previously supposed.
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
publishDate 2020
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532020000600012
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