Friday, April 27, 2018

Corlea Iron Age Trackway

Detail of Corlea Trackway, County Longford, Ireland
Photo: Flickr

Ancient Origins website featured the Corlea Trackway in County Longford on 14th April 2018.  This important archaeological site warrants wider publicity because of its unique nature and the excellent visitor centre built on the site.
The Corlea Trackway, known in Irish as Bóthar Chorr Liath, is a timber trackway dated to the Iron Age. This ancient trackway is located near Keenagh, a village to the south of Longford, in County Longford. It was discovered during the 1980s, when it was exposed during the harvesting of peat. Today, the Corlea Trackway is on permanent display in a specially constructed exhibition centre built at the site of the discovery. 
This trackway is composed of oak planks resting on a foundation of birch rails. Based on tree ring dating (known also as dendrochronology) conducted at Queen’s University Belfast, it was determined that the trees used to build the trackway were felled either in late 148 BC or early 147 BC. 
Largest Wooden Trackway in Europe
Corlea is the largest wooden trackway or togher discovered in Europe, spanning about one kilometre of bogland and is about three and a half meters wide. It is estimated that three hundred large oak trees were felled to create the planks and about the same amount of birch was needed for the rails. This equates to about a thousand wagon-loads of construction material.
The first routes in Ireland were prehistoric trackways, some of which were later developed into roads suitable for wheeled vehicles. Trackways typically date to the early to middle Neolithic period, the Middle and Late Bronze Age, early Iron Age (c. 500-300 BC) and throughout the early medieval and late medieval periods.
 
Detail of preserved section of Corlea Trackway
Photo: Wikimedia
The Corlea Trackway is unique in Ireland due to its large width and smooth surface, suggesting that it was used for wheeled vehicles such as carts or, perhaps, even chariots. Two massive block-wheels, dating to about 400 BC, which were found in 1968 and 1969 in Doogarymore, Co. Roscommon, are the earliest direct evidence at present known for wheeled transport in Ireland.

Wooden Wheel, Doogarymore, County Roscommon
Further Trackways Discovered
Research carried cut by Dr. Barry Raftery of University College, Dublin, over the five-year period 1985 - 1989, in the Mountdillon complex of bogland, Co. Longford, has done much to increase our knowledge of this hitherto neglected aspect of our history. (Trackways Through Time by Barry Raftery - Headline Publishing). During this time some 57 tracks were excavated, some extensively, and more to a limited degree. Excavations up to 1991 in Corlea bog discovered 59 toghers in an area of around 125 hectares while further work increased the total to 108 with a further 76 revealed in the nearby Derryoghil bog.
Peatland once covered some 16% of the land surface of Ireland. Prior to modern drainage much of central Ireland consisted of soggy marshland interspersed with areas of dry land. This presented enormous problems for the ancient traveller whose existence involved moving about the land. The early inhabitants of Ireland lived on the uplands where they looked after their herds and cultivated the land, which would have been surrounded by large areas of wetland. 
 Theories of Use
It is unclear how the Corlea Trackway was used by the Iron Age people living in the locality. Some archaeologists, for instance, have argued that our ancestors used the trackway to cross the bog. Others, however, believe the trackway allowed people to travel into the bog, where rituals could be carried out.
The life of these ancient roadways would have been short in view of the extremely wet conditions in the continually growing bog. The trackways would quickly sink into the soft peat and become covered in vegetation. Projecting pegs would have marked the route through the bog after the walking surface had become obscured.
Corlea Visitor Centre
              Photo: Longford Tourism
Preservation
Peat bogs, provide an ideal environment for the preservation of organic remains, including wooden artefacts. The acidic conditions create an environment which is low in oxygen. This prevents the growth of microorganisms, which helps to preserve organic remains, such as wood, leather, and even the soft tissues of humans or animals. 
Hundreds of ancient bog bodies have been discovered in the boglands of Europe over the last few centuries, of which about 130 have been found in Ireland. Most of bog bodies date from the Iron Age. Experts believe that many of the Irish Iron Age bog bodies are the remains of former kings who were sacrificed.
Today, some 18 meters (60 ft) of the Corlea Trackway is on permanent display within the Visitor Centre. A boardwalk, which follows the course of the remaining trackway that is still buried under the bog, was constructed to allow visitors to have a sense of how the Corlea Trackway may have looked during the Iron Age. The Corlea Trackway ended on a small island from which a second trackway, also radiocarbon dated to 148 BC, connected to dry land on the far side of the bog. This second trackway was also around one kilometre long. 
Conclusion
The Corlea Trackway was built from trees felled either in late 148 BC or early 147 BC  giving us a precise date for its construction. It was a major building project for its time requiring a high level of both skill and social organisation. The trackway was preserved by the unique conditions which exist in our boglands. While we cannot say for sure why the Corlea Trackway was built all those years ago, we can marvel at such an achievement. The visitor centre housing the trackway provides a wealth of information on this and other bogland discoveries but do check the opening times if you are planning a visit.
For further information please see:





Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Oldest Human DNA from Africa

Map of Morroco showing Grotte des Pigeons
(c) MailOnline/Johny Reading

About 15,000 years ago, in the oldest known cemetery in the world, people buried their dead in sitting positions with beads and animal horns, deep in a cave in what is now Morocco. These people were also buried with small, sophisticated stone arrowheads and points. Archaeologists assumed they were part of an advanced European culture that had migrated across the Mediterranean Sea to North Africa.
Recent studies of their ancient DNA show that they had no European ancestry. Instead, they were related to both Middle Easterners and sub-Saharan Africans, suggesting that more people were migrating in and out of North Africa than previously thought.

First Fossil Evidence of Modern Humans

The first fossil evidence for any modern humans outside Africa comes from the Middle East, from the archaeological sites of Skhul and Qafzeh in Israel, dating to around 120,000 years ago. However, this early expansion of modern humans was not maintained. Until recently, the expansion of our own species out of Africa that eventually led to the colonisation of the globe was thought to have occurred after 100,000 years ago.
A re-evaluation of early human remains and artefacts also from Morocco has pushed back the advent of Homo sapiens by 100,000 years. Archaeologists and palaeontologists now think that the oldest of the fossils comes from 300,000 to 350,000 years ago. Skulls, teeth, and long bones of at least five Homo sapiens, along with stone tools and animal bones, have been found at Jebel Irhoud, Morocco.
Teeth from skeletons unearthered at 
Grotte des Pigeons cave revealing extensive
tooth decay. Credit: Isabelle De Groote
Analysis of deposits from the front of the cave revealed the ancient people indulged on snails, pine nuts and, significantly, carbohydrate-rich acorns, which may have contributed to the tooth decay found in these early people. The new findings suggest that the concept of a ‘sweet tooth’ may be much older than believed. Nevertheless, it is estimated that less than 2% of Stone Age foragers had cavities in their teeth in marked contrast to later populations on a diet high in carbohydrates.

Oldest human DNA evidence from Africa

The oldest human DNA evidence yet from Africa has come from the cave known as the Grotte des Pigeons, near the village of Taforalt in northeast Morocco. Humans occupied this cave on and off from at least 80,000 years ago till about 10,000 years ago.  These people lived in the front of the cave and buried their dead in the back.
During recent excavations at Grotte des Pigeons, archaeologists saved the inner-ear petrous bones, which provides an excellent source for ancient DNA. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, in Jena, Germany, extracted ancient mitochondrial DNA, which is passed on only from mothers to their children, from seven individuals.
The researchers found no genetic tie to ancient Europeans. Known as the Iberomaurusians, they seem to be related to Middle Easterners and other Africans. These people shared about two-thirds of their genetic ancestry with Natufians, hunter-gatherers who lived in the Middle East 14,500 to 11,000 years ago, and one-third with sub-Saharan Africans who were most closely related to today’s West Africans and the Hadza of Tanzania.
 
Grotte des Pigeons Cave at Taforalt
Photo: Wikipedia
Iberomaurusians and Natufians

Further studies will search for the people who gave rise to both the Iberomaurusians, found throughout North Africa, and the Natufians. The Natufian culture existed in the Levant, a region in the Eastern Mediterranean. The culture was unusual in that it supported a sedentary or semi-sedentary population even before the introduction of agriculture. Natufians founded Jericho which may be the oldest city in the world (Wikipedia).
The theory that Europeans from Sicily or the Iberian Peninsula were buried at Grotte des Pigeons was not supported by DNA analysis. The fact that the Natufian culture existed in the Middle East suggests the Grotte des Pigeons people and the Natufians shared common ancestors from North Africa or the Middle East.
 These findings provide new evidence of early contacts between North Africa and the Near East, and regions south of the Sahara Desert. Further DNA studies on other Iberomaurusian sites will be required to establish whether the evidence from the Grotte des Pigeons is representative of the Iberomaurusian gene pool.

Conclusion

The number of ancient DNA studies has increased dramatically over the past two decades, covering a period of human history going back 40,000 years. The oldest human DNA evidence yet from Africa has come from the cave known as the Grotte des Pigeons, in northeast Morocco. Archaeologists had assumed that these ancient people were part of an advanced European culture that had migrated across the Mediterranean Sea to North Africa. Recent studies of the ancient DNA of these people shows that they had no European ancestry. Instead, they were related to both Middle Easterners and sub-Saharan Africans.