Mexico to extract 13,000-year-old 'Naia' skeleton from cave - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:44 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Mexico to extract 13,000-year-old 'Naia' skeleton from cave

Mexican experts plan to extract the entire skeleton of a teenage girl who nearly 13,000 years ago toppled into a deep hole in a Mexican cave and died, an official says.

Tooth and rib fragments recovered so far could confirm origins of first North Americans

Archaeologists will begin the difficult process of extracting the entire skeleton of Naia, a girl who died around 13,000 years ago after falling into a deep cave in Mexico, in the coming weeks. (Roberto Chavez Arce)

Mexican experts plan to extract the entire skeleton of a teenage girl who nearly 13,000 years ago toppled into a deep hole in a Mexican cave and died, an official said Monday.

Archaeologist Pilar Luna said that so far only a molar and a fragment of a rib have been removed from the underground cave where the remains were found in 2007.

Once recovered, the remains will be studied and then displayed, probably in Quintana Roo state where the teenage girl was found, said Luna, deputy director of Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History.

The skeleton was found in an underwater cave known as Hoyo-Negro, in Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. DNA collected from the bone fragments have helped to support a long-held theory that the first North Americans reached the continent via a land bridge from Asia. (Roberto Chavez Arce via Science/Associated Press)

The discovery of the girl's skeleton is bolstering the long-held theory that humans arrived in the Americas by way of a land bridge from Asia.

Luna said experts had also located remains belonging to 26 animals, including saber-toothed tigers, giant tapirs and bears, but that further study on the remains needed to be done.

The girl's nearly complete skeleton was discovered by chance by expert divers who were mapping water-filled caves north of the city of Tulum, in the eastern part of the Yucatan Peninsula.

When they reached the floor of the 30.5-metrechamber, which was littered with animal bones, they came across the girl's skull on a ledge, lying upside down.

The divers named the girl Naia, after a water nymph of Greek mythology.