Pursuant to the earlier Palanth forum discussion of the alleged 40,000-year-old Mexican footprints
HERE, the ongoing debate between Gonzalez
et al. and Renne
et al. over the genuine nature and dating of the "footprints" has moved onto the pages of the
Mammoth Trumpet. According to a news story reported Tuesday (yesterday) in the (Columbus, Ohio) Dispatch.com
Cloud of scholarly dust rises over ancient footprints claim
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
BRADLEY T. LEPPER
Are the footprints of surprisingly ancient Americans preserved in 40,000-year-old volcanic ash in southern Mexico? In December, an article in the journal Science cast a cloud of doubt over that claim.
The authors, Michael Waters and Paul Renne, argue that the ash dated to 1.3 million years ago, much too old for humans on this continent, and that the so-called footprints were nothing more than marks made by the tools of modern workers quarrying the stone with crowbars.
Now, Silvia Gonzalez, an archaeologist from Liverpool John Moores University, and several members of her research team have published their data and interpretations in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews. Based on their results, the case is far from closed.
According to the researchers, the early dates for the ash are wrong. They note that the overlying deposits range in age from 9,000 to 40,000 years, with no evidence of significant breaks in the sequence.
Moreover, an article in the March issue of the Mammoth Trumpet states that Gonzalez and her team have dated lake sediments below the ash layer to about 100,000 years ago, which would mean the ash had to be considerably younger than the date reported in Science....(more)..
Added later. Contrary to what Bradley Lepper's story in the Columbus Dispatch says, the Renne et al. paper dating the 'footprint' ash to about 1.3 million years appeared in the journal Nature HERE, not in Science.
The Columbus Dispatch story can be read in its entirety
CLICK HERE. Without access to the March 2006 issue of
Mammoth Trumpet, I'm in-the-dark as to how much real "news" is here, but if I have read the Gonzalez
et al. article in the February 2006
Quaternary Science Reviews HERE correctly, previous attempts to OSL date the lake sediments underlying the 'footprint' ash failed to give satisfactory results. So if my comprehension of all this is correct, the "news" reported in
Mammoth Trumpet is the successful dating of the lake sediments underlying the 'footprint' ash to about 100 ka. If anyone having access to the March 2006
Mammoth Trumpet would care to comment, it would be much appreciated.
Dar