How pollutants and poo paint a picture of past civilizations
Email Bluesky Facebook LinkedIn Reddit Whatsapp X A sediment core that was extracted about 11 kilometres from Mount Hora in Malawi, a site with a rich history of human occupation. Credit: David K. Wright/University of Oslo In 2019, environmental archaeologist David Wright at the University of Oslo visited what was, at first glance, an extremely unappealing field site: a cluster of leech-infested swamps in northern Malawi. At times ankle-deep in the grassy water, he and his colleagues set up a percussion auger — an instrument used in the extraction of cylinders of mud by hammering a long plastic tube into the ground. The hard part was getting the cores back out again. With his knees bent, Wright would brace the auger against his shoulder and push against the ground. In one swamp, the sediment was so sticky that the auger snapped in half. “It’s pretty tough work,” Wright says, and the leeches settling around the team’s ankles were an added bonus. Neanderthals mastered fire — 400,000 years ago