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    Fossil Footprints Reveal Oldest Elephant Herd

    The world's oldest elephant tracks have now been revealed, 7-million-year-old footprints in the Arabian Desert, researchers say.

    These prehistoric footsteps, likely the work of some 13 four-tusked elephant ancestors, are the earliest direct evidence of how the ancestors of modern elephants interacted socially, and the oldest evidence of an elephant herd.

    "Basically, this is fossilized behavior," said researcher Faysal Bibi, a vertebrate paleontologist at the Museum for Natural History in Berlin. "This is an absolutely unique site, a really rare opportunity in the fossil record that lets you see animal behavior in a way you couldn't otherwise do with bones or teeth."

    The site, known as Mleisa 1, is in the United Arab Emirates. The region then was home to a great diversity of animals, including elephants, hippopotamuses, antelopes, giraffes, pigs, monkeys, rodents, small and large carnivores, ostriches, turtles, crocodiles and fish. These were sustained by a very large river flowing slowly through the area, along which flourished vegetation, including large trees. The animals resembled those from Africa during the same time, though there are also similarities with Asian and European species of that period. 

    Fossil trackways in the region have been long known to locals, and were taken to be the prints of dinosaurs or giants of ancient myth. It was not until January 2011, when researchers mapped the area from the air for the first time, "that we realized what we had and how we could go about studying it," Bibi said. [The Creatures of Cryptozoology]

    "Once we saw it aerially, it became a much different and clearer story," said researcher Brian Kraatz at Western University of Health Sciences in Pomona, Calif. "Seeing the whole site in one shot meant we could finally understand what was happening."

    The footprints cover an area of 12.3 acres (5 hectares). This is about equal to nine U.S. football fields, seven soccer fields, or the base of the Great Pyramid of Giza.

    "The trackways are visually stunning," said researcher Andrew Hill at the University of Poitiers in France. "It is quite obvious to anyone, without any technical knowledge, that these are the footprints of very large animals, and to learn that they are over 6 million years old presents a visitor with the sensation of walking back in time."

    The researchers noted that while these prehistoric titans were proboscideans like modern elephants, they likely looked quite different. Of the three kinds of fossil proboscidean species in the area at that time, the one that most likely made the trackways was Stegotetrabelodon syrticus, the earliest known member of the elephant family, "which carried tusks in both its upper and lower jaws," Bibi told LiveScience.

    The trackways stretch up to about 850 feet (260 meters) long, making them "the most extensive ever recorded for mammals, and to view them is to be transported 7 million years back in time when herds of four-tusked primitive elephants and other related behemoths roamed a wetter and more vegetated Arabian Peninsula," said paleontologist William Sanders at the University of Michigan, who did not take part in the study. [Photos of Elephant Trackways]

    Actually mapping these footsteps proved challenging, since the individual tracks are each only about 15 inches (40 centimeters) wide, too small to show up in satellite imagery. To do so, researchers mounted a pocket digital camera onto a kite, stitching the hundreds of pictures it took into a single large mosaic image that gave a broad overview of the site.

    Analysis of the footsteps suggests they belonged to a herd of at least 13 elephants of different sizes and ages that walked through mud, leaving behind tracks that hardened, were buried, and then re-exposed by erosion.

    The researchers also discovered tracks from a solitary male traveling in a different direction from the herd. These suggest the extinct giants divided into solitary and social groups, just as elephants do today. Also, these ancient pachyderms might have structured themselves along lines of sex just as their modern relatives do, with the males leaving the herd to live alone.

    "Like the human handprints in Paleolithic caves, animal trackways crystallize in time [the] identity and behavior of the organisms that made them, and yield rare insights about these organisms, which fossil bones alone cannot provide," Sanders said.

    The scientists detail their findings online tomorrow (Feb. 22) in the journal Biology Letters.

    Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

     
    • Tony  •  3 mths ago
      How do they know the single set of tracks going the other way was a male?
      • Aurelio 3 mths ago
        Because its proboscis was dragging.
      • Tony 3 mths ago
        LMAO.........Less than 5 minutes! I predicted someone would say "Because of the 5th footprint" in 10 minutes or less.
      • Homunculus 3 mths ago
        Its a best guess due to current pachyderm behavioral patterns. They will measure the prints and size averages will determine the sex.
    • Wolf  •  Vienna, Austria  •  3 mths ago
      why are there never picture`???. I want to see them.That is so annoying!
      • Lou C. Ferr 3 mths ago
        That would be "RESPONSIBLE JOURNALISM" which is counter to their SOP...
      • bill 3 mths ago
        kodak is extinct.
      • LNH 3 mths ago
        The time machine is off line today.
    • Display name  •  3 mths ago
      A 7-million year old elephant...probably walked kinda slow.
    • Chingala  •  3 mths ago
      This guy walks into a bar with a seven million year old elephant ...
    • Russell Sanders  •  3 mths ago
      I'm a bit surprised by the comments. Are the majority of people really this vicious and negative in their reactions to everything? I wonder how many people responding in the comments have ever gone to a museum or even read a non-fiction history book.

      This discovery didn't suggest anything about politics or religion. Its a significant find about the pre-historic world that sheds a bit more light on those times. Its not supposed to create a revolution. Its merely a discovery and the title of the article was pretty plain. Anyone who clicked on it should have known precisely what the article was about, and yet some complained about its content and tried to twist it into an attack supporting their personal bias.

      Has society degraded so badly that even a scientific discovery brings out flows of viciousness and hate? After reading these responses, I truly wonder.
      • stoopidlefty 3 mths ago
        Well said.
      • baby boomer 3 mths ago
        any one that still lives in the dark ages is ether retarded or needs mental health care------a lot happens in 13.7 billion years----
      • Harold 3 mths ago
        and think reading requires independant thought, The monkey decendants believe anything.
    • Greg  •  Fort Worth, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      This story on elephants is Proof that Republicans have been around a long time
      • Boydnar 3 mths ago
        Actually, since about 1853! Funny comment, though. Gave you thumbs up!
    • Cynthia W  •  Jacksonville, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      Let's try to keep present-day elephants alive and stop the poaching. No more selling or buying of ivory without a lengthy prison sentence.
    • kevin  •  3 mths ago
      Amazing how the earth and it's inhabitants changes over time. I wonder how we will be perceived in the future by any surviving humans. Probably:"What were they thinking?"
    • Don't be a Hypocrite  •  Ocala, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      To the people who read a religious pamphlet about science but think they have a PHD; better to remain silent and be thought a fool than speak and remove all doubt.
    • Gudelos  •  3 mths ago
      Great work scientists. Learning the truth about the course life has taken- and is taking- on this planet is fascinating and rejuvenating.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 mths ago
      I found deer prints in my backyard once.
    • Greg  •  3 mths ago
      And now we pump them into our gas tanks and away we go!!
    • Frank Reardon  •  3 mths ago
      first the squirrel then an elephant, whats next a sloth?
    • KH  •  3 mths ago
      They shouldn't have to look far, a 7 million year old elephant can't walk very fast.
    • LEROY  •  3 mths ago
      but where is the elephant
    • Brian  •  3 mths ago
      One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got into my pajamas I'll never know.
    • george  •  3 mths ago
      Any elephant eggs laying around out there?
    • mikem  •  Pine Bluff, Arkansas  •  3 mths ago
      Now thats an interesting story. Learned something for a change.
    • AdamD  •  Coraopolis, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      The best part about the comments here is how tough it is to tell who is trolling and who is stupid...
    • Ricky  •  Columbia, South Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      This is a discussion about science not religion. though the two entertwine sometimes their are just to many radical religious people who refuse to learn anything. This is the oldist site of a herd. not the oldest elephants. The oldest elephant like creatures lived in the early miocene and are around 15 million years old. They also had two upper and two lower tusks. These are called gompatherium. I love hunting for fossils. I dive and dig for them up and down the east coast. most people wouldn't believe what is under their feet. I live in south carolina and most the animal fossils here are from the pliestocene. we sometimes find them as old as the eocene, wich was about 45 million years ago. we used to have an american Lion the same size as the african Lion(felis atrox), rhinos, giant camels, sabre toothed cats, three toed horses and so many large fuana species that no longer exist as well as giant Megalodon sharks teeth. Florida is the real tresure trove of animal fossils on the east coast of the U.S. the largest elaphant tooth ever found came from the Phosphate mines in central florida. it is called conobelladon.evolution is real. why would a supreme being create a creature and then not let it adapt to its changing climate. the earth has always been changing long before humans arrived. Ever since the late miocene we have gone into and out of many many ice ages. have you ever seen the painting of washington crosing the plutomic river. there where giant chunks of ice. you would never see that today. The Earth has been warming since the last ice age. Ive helped out university of florida on a dive where their where indian burial mounds in fifteen feet of water. And their are mamoth fossils all over fla. And my buddy found a Musk Ox skull cap "it was only about 12,00years old." in the cooper river near charleston sc. today they only live in some of the coldest places. humans carbon footprint is virtually nonexistant to a medium sized volcanic eruption. so people shouldn't worry so much about global warming. the earth knows just what to do.
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