Archaeologists find human footprint left by naughty teenager 2,000 years ago at Roman fort
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Adolescent could have been dodging a telling-off on Roman Tyneside
The first Roman footprint by a human at Vindolanda has been found in a tile© Vindolanda Trust A tile with a “clear imprint” of a foot is the first time a human print has been discovered at the industrious Roman fort of Vindolanda, say archaeologists who suspect the freshly-made slab could have been accidentally or mischeviously stood on by an adolescent sometime between 160 and 180 AD.
More than 6,000 leather shoes have previously been found at the Hadrian’s Wall site near the village of Bardon Mill. But the new find, made by Canadian student volunteer Mel Benard, is the clearest footstep left behind by the people who once roamed the north-east.
Mel Benard with her discovery© Vindolanda Trust “I knew straight away that it was a footprint,” says Benard, from the University of Western Ontario, whose tile is contemporary with a kiln site uncovered at Vindolanda.
“This was the first artefact that I had found. Finding something which would be considered special enough to go on display in the Vindolanda Museum was one of the ambitions of the Field School.
“It is so exciting to have discovered something which links you directly to that individual nearly 2,000 years later. We are all absolutely thrilled.”
Dr Elizabeth Green, the Co-Director of the Field School, says the site’s archaeology can shed light on “otherwise voiceless individuals”.
“I imagine the boy or girl who stepped in this newly produced tile was in more than a little trouble,” she thinks.
“This find is really extraordinary. It brings full circle the story that Vindolanda has to tell.”
This season’s excavations continue until September 25 2015.
What do you think? Leave a comment below.Animal prints on wall tiles previously discovered at the site© Vindolanda Trust Dog paws© Vindolanda Trust Pig prints© Vindolanda Trust More from Culture24's Archaeology section:Archaeologists find 2,000-year-old wooden toilet seat used by Romans at Vindolanda fortService personnel to help archaeologists as year of excavations at Vindolanda Roman fort beginsArchaeologists hail "magical moment" as rare Roman gold coin found at Vindolanda
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/archaeology/art530621-archaeologists-find-human-footprint-left-by-naughty-teenager-2000-years-ago-at-roman-fort