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Ichnos
An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces
Volume 15, 2008 - Issue 3-4
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Original Articles

Hominid Ichnotaxonomy: An Exploration of a Neglected Discipline

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Pages 126-139 | Published online: 02 Dec 2008
 

Abstract

Although more than 60 ancient hominid track sites ranging in age from 3.7 million to less than 500 B. P. are recorded from all continents except Antarctica, no ichnotaxonomic names have ever been formally proposed for hominid tracks. There is no prohibition to the naming of fossil footprints of species that created tracks and trackways similar to those of living species. On the contrary, there is precedent for the naming of ichnotaxa corresponding to the dominant extant vertebrates classes: mammals = Mammalipedia and birds = Avipeda. The hominid track site sample includes only about a dozen sites where footprint preservation is good enough to show details of diagnostic foot morphology and typical trackway morphology. We infer that the Acahualinca Footprint Museum site in Nicaragua represents the most important ancient hominid track site that combines accessibility, a large sample of well-preserved trackways and reliable dating. For this reason, we select the Nicaraguan tracks as the type sample for the new ichnotaxon Hominipes modernus ichnogen., and ichnsp. et ichnosp. nov., which we infer to represent fully modern Homo sapiens. Our preliminary investigations of other track sites suggest that the majority also yield H. modernus. However, at many sites preservation is insufficient to make an ichnotaxonomic designation at the species level or to infer that the trackmaker was H. sapiens. Thus, at many sites including the famous Laetoli site, we apply the more general label of Hominipes isp. indet.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study was financially supported by a grant from the Korea Science and Engineering Foundation and the Cultural Heritage Administration of Korea. The authors wish to express sincere thanks to Dr. C. H. Cheong, Emeritus professor of Seoul National University, for his encouragement, and to Dr. Y. P. Jin, H. S. Cho, and S. H. Kim for their assistance in the field. We also thank Jeff Meldrum, Idaho State University, and Andrew R. C. Milner, St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site, for their helpful reviews.

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