6A - Monday, February 10, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Scientists discover 800,000-year-old footprints in England Find indicates widespread human activity outside Africa LONDON (AP) - They were a British family on a day out - almost amillionyears ago. Archaeologists announced Friday that they have discovered human footprints in England that are between 800,000 and 1 mil- lion years old - the most ancient found outside Africa, and the earliest evidence of human life in northern Europe. A team from the British Muse- um, London's Natural History Museum and Queen Mary college atthe UniversityofLondonuncov- ered imprints from up to five indi- viduals in ancient estuary mud at Happisburgh on the country's eastern coast. British Museum archaeologist Nick Ashton said the discovery - recounted in detail in the journal PLOS ONE - was "a tangible link to our earliest human relatives." Preserved in layers of silt and sand for hundreds of millennia before being exposed by the tide last year, the prints give a vivid glimpse of some of our most ancient ancestors. They were left by a group, including at least two children and one adult male. They could have been be a family for- aging on the banks of a river sci- entists think may be the ancient Thames, beside grasslands where bison, mammoth, hippos and rhi- noceros roamed. University of Southampton archaeology professor Clive Gam- ble, who was not involved in the project, said the discovery was "tremendously significant." "It's just so tangible," he said. "This is the closest we've got to seeing the people. "When I heard about it, it was like hearing the first line of (Wil- liam Blake's hymn) 'Jerusalem' - 'And did those feet, in ancient time, walk upon England's moun- tains green?' Well, they walked upon its muddy estuary." The researchers said the humans who left the footprints may have been related to Homo antecessor, or "pioneer man," whose fossilized remains have been found in Spain. That species died out about 800,000 years ago. Ashton said the footprints are between 800,000 - "as a conser- vative estimate" - and 1 million years old, at least 100,000 years older than scientists' earlier esti- mate of the first human habita- tion in Britain. That's significant because 700,000 years ago, Brit- ain had a warm, Mediterranean- style climate. The earlier period was much colder, similar to mod- ern-day Scandinavia. Natural History Museum archaeologist Chris Stringer said that 800,000 or 900,000 years ago Britain was "the edge of the inhabited world." "This makes us rethink our feel- ings about the capacity of these early people, that they were coping with conditions somewhat colder than the present day,"he said. "Maybe they had cultural adap- tations to the cold we hadn't even thought were possible 900,000 years ago. Did they wear cloth- ing? Did they make shelters, windbreaks and so on? Could they have the use of fire that far back?" he asked. Syrian men help survivors out ofa destroyed building after a Syrian forces warplane's attack in Aleppo, Syria, Saturday. Civiian evacuation continues in wartorn centr l Syrian ci Hungarian Jewish group to boycott Holocaust memorials Members say they will not participate in government sponsored events BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) - The Federation of Hungar- ian Jewish Communities said Sunday it will boycott all gov- ernment events commemorat- ing the 70th anniversary of the Holocaust in Hungary unless the government cancels some of the planned memorials., The dispute stems from his- torical and ideological differenc- es between the federation and Government forces gain upper hand as rebels restricted to small neighborhoods BEIRUT (AP) - Hundreds of civilians were evacuated Sunday from the besieged Syrian city of Homs, braving gunmen spraying bullets and lobbing mortar shells to flee as part of a rare three-day truce to relieve a choking block- ade. Dozens were wounded as they fled. The cease-fire came as Syrian officials arrived in Switzerland for a new round of talks with opposition activists-in-exile to try to negotiate an end to Syria's three-year conflict. More than 600 people were evacuated from Homs on Sun- day, said Governor Talal Bar- razi. The operation was part of a U.N.-mediated truce that began Friday between the government of President Bashar Assad and armed rebels to allow thousands of women, children and elderly men to leave opposition-held parts of the city, and to permit the entry of food and supplies. Forces loyal to Assad have blockaded rebel-held parts of Homs for over a year, causing widespread hunger and suffer- ing. Prime Minister Viktor Orban's government about the yearlong series of remembrances centered on the 1944 deportation of more than 430,000 Hungarian Jews to Nazi death camps. "The known plans do not take into account the arguments or the sensitivity of the victims of the horrors of the Holocaust," the group said, adding that there had been "no substantive prog- ress on the government side in the dispute over the Hungarian Holocaust Memorial Year." The federation voted 76-2 in favor of the boycott, with three absten- tions. Mazsihisz, the federation's Hungarian acronym, wants the government to abandon plans to build a memorial of Nazi Ger- many's 1944 invasion of Hunga- ry and a project dedicated to the child victims of the Holocaust. The "House of Fates" memo- rial is being built at a Budapest railway station from which Jews were deported to Nazi death camps. The memorial honoring children will include an exhibit and education center, and Mazsi- hisz said it has been sidelined from the project, whose "histori- cal approach remains unknown" to the federation's experts. Mazsihisz fears both memo- rials will downplay the role of Hungary and Hungarians in the Holocaust. Dozens of people were wound- ed when they came under fire as they waited at an agreed-upon evacuation point in the rebel- held neighborhood of al-Qara- bis, according to three activists based in Homs, who spoke to The Associated Press by Skype. Despite the gunfire and exploding mortar shells, hun- dreds of women, children and elderly men ran toward a group of Red Crescent workers waiting less than a mile (kilometer) away, said an activist who gave his name as Samer al-Homsy. The Syrian activists said the gunfire came from a government-held neighborhood. The Syrian news agency SANA also reported that civilians came under fire, but blamed "terror- ists," the government term for rebels. At least four busloads of civil- ians were shipped out, according to footage broadcast on the Leb- anese television station al-Maya- deen. Wide-eyed children, their prominent cheekbones sugges- tive of malnutrition, tumbled out of a bus, assisted by aid workers. "Our life was a disaster, we had no food, no water," one dis- tressed woman said. "There was nothing, my chil- dren are all sick. They were thirsty," she said, standingwith a group of exhausted-looking chil- dren as khaki-clad Syrian sol- diers, Red Crescent workers in red jump suits and U.N. workers in blue protective vests gathered around the buses. Some evacuees were to be hosted in government-run shel- ters, others were going to join relatives in safer areas, while still others said they did not know where they were going. Khaled Erksoussi of the Syri- an Red Crescent, which is assist- ing the operation, told the AP that the agency hoped to evacu- ate as many civilians as possible before the truce expires Monday. On Saturday, gunmen opened fire on civilians, leaving aid workerswounded and two trucks damaged, Erksoussi said, speak- ing by telephone from Damascus., Despite the violence, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refu- 'gees, Ant6nio Guterres, said in a statement that the truce showed "that even in the darkest of nights it is possible to offer a glimmer of hope to people in des- perate need of assistance." The Homs cease-fire was arranged by U.N. mediator Lakhdar Brahimi, who urged the warring sides to aid the esti- mated 2,500 civilians trapped in the ancient, rebel-held quarters known as Old Homs, to build trust during the first face-to-face meetings of government officials and opposition figures in Swit- zerland last month. Call: #734-418-4115 LOVE THE Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com DAILY? 1 V 1( 2 2 2 2E 3 3 3E 3i 3E 4 41 4' 44 ----- - ---- 1-1- I , ... I'.'- . 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