800,000-year-old human footprints found in Norfolk
7 February 2014
Happisburgh prints, believed to have been left by small group of adults and children, are the oldest discovered outside Africa
The oldest human footprints ever found outside Africa, left in a muddy river estuary 800,000 years ago, have been discovered in Norfolk by scientists from the British Museum and other national museums and universities.
The prints were left by a small group of people heading south across the estuary at Happisburgh, through a landscape where mammoths, hippos and rhinoceros grazed. Scientists believe they were a group of adults and children, including one with a foot size the equivalent of a modern size 8 shoe, suggesting a man about 1.7 metres (5ft 7ins) tall.
The footprints are the first direct evidence of the earliest known humans in northern Europe, previously revealed only by the stone tools and animal bones they left scattered.
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/feb/07/oldest-human-footprints-happisburgh-norfolk