SEVILLE, SPAIN—Yahoo! News reports that an international team of researchers studying a sand dune overlooking Gibraltar’s Catalan Bay has discovered a footprint thought to have been left by a teenaged hominin some 29,000 years ago. The individual who left the print is thought to have stood between about 42 and 50 inches tall, and may have been a young Neanderthal, since evidence of Neanderthal occupation on the peninsula has been found in Gorham’s Cave, which overlooks the Alboran Sea. The footprint was found among prints made by red deer, ibex, aurochs, leopards, and straight-tusked elephants. To read about evidence of artwork produced by Neanderthals discovered in Gorham's Cave, go to “Symbolic Neanderthals.”
Possible Neanderthal Footprint Discovered in Gibraltar
News February 14, 2019
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2021
Neanderthal Hearing
Top 10 Discoveries of the Decade January/February 2021
Neanderthal Genome
Vindija Cave, Croatia, 2010
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2020
Painful Past
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2020
Twisted Neanderthal Tech
-
Features January/February 2019
A Dark Age Beacon
Long shrouded in Arthurian lore, an island off the coast of Cornwall may have been the remote stronghold of early British kings
(Skyscan Photolibrary/Alamy Stock Photo) -
Letter from Leiden January/February 2019
Of Cesspits and Sewers
Exploring the unlikely history of sanitation management in medieval Holland
(Photo by BAAC Archeologie en Bouwhistorie) -
Artifacts January/February 2019
Neo-Hittite Ivory Plaque
(Copyright MAIAO, Sapienza University of Rome/Photo by Roberto Ceccacci) -
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2019
The Case of the Stolen Sumerian Antiquities
(© Trustees of the British Museum)