Archeologists Discover 100,000-Year-Old Human Footprints in Morocco

 Images from the site on the coast of the Larache city, on the Atlantic ocean. (Nature journal)
Images from the site on the coast of the Larache city, on the Atlantic ocean. (Nature journal)
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Archeologists Discover 100,000-Year-Old Human Footprints in Morocco

 Images from the site on the coast of the Larache city, on the Atlantic ocean. (Nature journal)
Images from the site on the coast of the Larache city, on the Atlantic ocean. (Nature journal)

Archaeologists in Morocco have discovered more than 80 human footprints described as the oldest in North Africa and the southern Mediterranean. The footprints are believed to be left by five individuals on a beach in northern Morocco, around 100,000 years ago.

According to AFP, the footprints were discovered on the coast of Larache, a city 90 kilometers south of Tangier, by archaeologists from Morocco, Spain, France, and Germany.

“The footprints were some of the world’s best-preserved human traces and the oldest in North Africa and the southern Mediterranean. The discovery opens new research horizons on prehistory in Morocco,” said Anass Sedrati, member of the research project.

This discovery was made coincidentally during a field mission in July 2022, as part of a scientific research project on the origins and dynamics of the boulders in the region.

Tests showed that “85 of the prints belong to at least five individuals who were likely searching for food in the sea,” said Sedrati.

The team suggests that those five individuals either lived in a region close to the site, or were only crossing the beach. “They were children, teens and adults,” the researchers noted.

The findings, published in the journal Nature in January, showed that these prints were preserved “in the upper area of the beach covered with sediments.”

Animal traces had also been discovered and efforts are ongoing to date them, according to Sedrati, who is the curator at the archaeological site of Lixus Larache.

In 2017, some homo sapiens remains dating back 300,000 years were unearthed in northwest Morocco, in the Jebel Irhoud region.

In other separate discoveries in recent years, prints dating back to the prehistoric era were found in Tangier, Tetouan, Rabat (north) and Essaouira (south).

The latest discovery achieved by the combined efforts of scientists from different specializations is “the first building block for in-depth research on the settlement and activity of Homo sapiens in Morocco,” Sedrati concluded.



Massive Winter Storm to Clobber US from Plains to East Coast

Elijah Minahan, of Johnstown, Pa., shovels out the driveway at his home in Westmont Borough as cold temperatures and snowfall hits the region on Friday, January 3, 2025. (Thomas Slusser/The Tribune-Democrat via AP)
Elijah Minahan, of Johnstown, Pa., shovels out the driveway at his home in Westmont Borough as cold temperatures and snowfall hits the region on Friday, January 3, 2025. (Thomas Slusser/The Tribune-Democrat via AP)
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Massive Winter Storm to Clobber US from Plains to East Coast

Elijah Minahan, of Johnstown, Pa., shovels out the driveway at his home in Westmont Borough as cold temperatures and snowfall hits the region on Friday, January 3, 2025. (Thomas Slusser/The Tribune-Democrat via AP)
Elijah Minahan, of Johnstown, Pa., shovels out the driveway at his home in Westmont Borough as cold temperatures and snowfall hits the region on Friday, January 3, 2025. (Thomas Slusser/The Tribune-Democrat via AP)

Millions of Americans from the Plains to the East Coast faced the threat of blizzards, heavy snow, treacherous ice and freezing rain through Monday, the National Weather Service said on Saturday.

Governors in Kentucky and Virginia declared states of emergency ahead of the winter storm.

"The storm is still taking shape," meteorologist Rich Bann of the NWS's Weather Prediction Center said Saturday evening. "But this thing has multiple hazards from heavy snows in the Plains to significant icing covering roads farther south."

He added that more than 60 million people in the US were affected by winter weather warnings, watches or advisories this weekend.

A swath extending eastward from Nebraska and Kansas through Ohio, Indiana, southwestern Pennsylvania and northwestern Virginia could see from 1 inch (2.54 cm) to 1 foot (30 cm) of snow. Ice could knock out power lines and cause widespread outages.

A wintry mess of freezing rain and ice will hit southern Missouri, Kentucky and Tennessee on Sunday, Bann said, likely making roads hazardous and downing power lines.

"It'll be nearly impossible to drive in some areas," he said.

The Kansas City International Airport in Missouri closed temporarily on Saturday afternoon due to rapid ice accumulation, officials said on social media.

Bann said that the storm should move past the East Coast and into the Atlantic Ocean by late on Monday, but a new blast of Arctic air will bring frigid cold to the eastern two-thirds of the US by the middle of next week.