Ancient Footprints Yield Surprising New Clues about the First Americans

Surprising new evidence suggests that humans were in North America as far back as 23,000 years ago, pushing back the earliest credible date by perhaps 10,000 years. At least if it holds up. Money quote:

At the height of the last Ice Age, generations of children and teenagers ambled barefoot along a muddy lakefront in what is now New Mexico, crossing paths with mammoths, giant ground sloths and an extinct canine species known as dire wolves.

Now, some 23,000 years later, the young people’s fossilized footprints are yielding new insights into when humans first populated the Americas. Unearthed in White Sands National Park by a research team that began its work in 2016, the tracks are about 10,000 years older and about 1,600 miles farther south than any other human footprints known in America….

And dire wolves!

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