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Magnifying glasses at the ready! World's smallest TV is the same size as a postage stamp - but functions.The research is published the journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. They could give an insight into ancient humans' potentially hazardous interaction with the area's volcanically active shoreline. The findings could shed light on ancient human behaviour in the latest Pleistocene.

The researchers believe that there are probably even more footprints buried beneath the area's northern sand dunes. The team is looking into the long-term preservation of the site, but the 3D modelling acts as a useful backup. However, the team later concluded that the ash had been carried by water, enabling them to determine a maximum age for the footprints by finding the youngest crystal present in the mud.Ī shell discovered in the mud above the footprints eventually led the team to conclude that the prints were between 5,000 and 19,100 years old.Īs well as carrying out geochemical, the researchers teamed up with the Smithsonian to create 3D scans of the entire area, reports National Geographic. This led them to initially estimate that the prints were around 120,000 years old. The team had originally believed that the mud preserving the footprints had resulted from falling ash, following a volcanic eruption. Some of the footprints were found by a local villager more than ten years ago, but only came to the attention of the scientific community in 2008 when an American conservationist visited the area. The huge collection of footprints was discovered on mudflats on the southern shore of Lake Natron in the village of Engare Sero in northern Tanzania The Maasai regularly travel on pilgrimages to the volcano to pay tribute to their god Engai. 'They record traces of our ancestors, their activity and behaviour during the latest Pleistocene along the margin of Lake Natron in Tanzania.' 'The footprints at Engare Sero add to the unique record of fossil footprint sites throughout the world. 'This means that the Engare Sero prints are latest Pleistocene in age.' 'The footprints were created (and then preserved) sometime between 19,000 and 10-12,000 years ago,' Dr Liutkus-Pierce told MailOnline. The researchers were led by Appalachian State University geologist and National Geographic grantee Dr Cynthia Liutkus-Pierce. The Ol Doinyo Lengai volcano, known to the Maasai people as 'Mountain of God', towers over the lake. The huge collection of footprints was discovered on mudflats on the southern shore of Lake Natron in the village of Engare Sero in northern Tanzania. No other site in Africa has as many homo sapien footprints. 'There's one area where there are so many prints, we've nicknamed it the "dance hall", because I've never seen so many prints in one 's completely nuts.'


'It's a very complicated site,' William Harcourt-Smith, a paleoanthropologist at the City University of New York and a member of the research team told National Geographic. The footprints were preserved in the mud nine miles away from a volcano that is sacred to the Maasai.
