The drag marks and footprints were discovered in present-day New Mexico. Researchers say they're some of the earliest known ...
Assuming the drag marks are as old as the researchers estimate, it would make them the “oldest known evidence of vehicle ...
Located just three hours from London, this hidden beach has four miles of unspoilt golden sands and is relatively uncrowded.
Unlike its bustling neighbours, Bournemouth and Sandbanks, Studland Bay has managed to retain its untouched charm and is the ...
They also serve as evidence of one of the oldest vehicles of all time—what’s known as a travois. The linear tracks from the poles and human footprints both date to roughly 22,000 years ago..
Uncannily preserved in the sands of New Mexico, archaeologists have discovered the oldest evidence yet of a vehicle used by humans: drag marks, along with footprints, left in the ground that have been ...
The linear tracks and human footprints found may be evidence of ancient transportation technology.
They are too cemented to be excavated. (Credit: Bournemouth University, The ichnology of White Sands (New Mexico): Linear traces and human footprints, evidence of transport technology? published ...
The tracks identified in New Mexico, some of which measure as long as 165 feet, were made by an X-shaped travois, while the varying size of the footprints suggest that children were in the group ...
Drag marks found in White Sands National Park, New Mexico, may belong to the earliest known vehicle, researchers say. Bournemouth University The invention of the wheel more than 5,000 years ago ...
Scientists discovered 22,000-year-old tracks in New Mexico, possibly the oldest evidence of human transportation using a travois.