free website hit counter Four-ton mega-sloths with flesh-rending claws ‘lived alongside humans for 10,000 years…& we used their bones as jewels’ – Netvamo

Four-ton mega-sloths with flesh-rending claws ‘lived alongside humans for 10,000 years…& we used their bones as jewels’


FOUR-ton mega-sloths with flesh-rendering claws lived alongside humans for 10,000 years, new research has found.

The 20ft tall meat eating beasts were thought to have been wiped out quickly when humans made it to the Americas.

Illustration of a person carving an osteoderm from a giant sloth.
AP

Humans are now thought to have lived alongside the giant sloths for 10,000 years[/caption]

Illustration of giant ground sloths, humans, and mastodons coexisting in Pleistocene-era Brazil.
AP

Giant sloths could have lived alongside humans in what is now Brazil[/caption]

Size comparison graphic showing a giant ground sloth next to a human and a car, illustrating that the prehistoric sloth was 20 feet tall.

But new research has found the sloth’s bones had been turned into jewellery by humans that lived alongside them 27,000 years ago.

One penny-sized sloth fossil appears to be deliberately polished and has a hole at one end.

It’s one of a number similar artefacts discovered in Santa Elina, modern-day Brazil, that are roughly 27,000 years old.

That’s a whopping 10,000 years earlier than humans were thought to have first arrived in the Americas.

That means humans would have lived alongside the giant sloths, as well as other massive animals like mastodons, sabre-toothed tigers, and dire wolves, for thousands of years.

Giant sloths once lived from Alaska to Argentina and some species had bony structures on their backs – a bit like the plates of modern armadillos – that may have been used to make decorations.

Originally researchers wondered if the craftsmen were working on already old fossils.

But University of Sao Paulo researcher Mírian Pacheco found ancient people were carving “fresh bones” shortly after the animals died.

She said: “We believe it was intentionally altered and used by ancient people as jewelry or adornment.”

Pacheco is able to date when the chemical change occurs in the bone – thus when humans would have likely carved them.


She said: “We found that the osteoderms were carved before the fossilization process… in fresh bones”.

The sloth bones were found at what was believed to be a human campsite.

Scientists know the first humans emerged in Africa, then moved into Europe and Asia, before finally making their way to the Americas.

But questions remain about when exactly they made the leap to the new world.

Researcher holding a small, smooth sloth fossil.
AP

Modified bones hint that humans arrived in the Americas much earlier than what was thought[/caption]

Paleontologist Thaís Pansani standing by a giant ground sloth skeleton at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.
AP

A reconstructed skeleton of a giant ground sloth[/caption]

Humans had previously been thought to have arrived in the Americas sometime around 11,000 and 13,000 years after a find in New Mexico.

That date coincides with the end of the last ice age – when people could have crossed the Bering land bridge from Asia into North America.

The fossil record also shows the widespread decline of megafauna – giant animals – starting around the same time.

Briana Pobiner, paleoanthropologist, said that story now “doesn’t really work so well anymore.”

Richard Fariña, a paleontologist at the University of the Republic in Montevideo, said anything thought to be older than 15,000 years drew intense scrutiny.

He said: “But really compelling evidence from more and more older sites keeps coming to light.”

Two researchers examine a giant sloth rib bone.
AP

A sloth rib bone found in Brazil[/caption]

About admin