The Tetrapod Trackway, Valentia Island, Co. Kerry

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A chance discovery

In 1993, on the picturesque island of Valentia, County Kerry, Ireland, an undergraduate geology student1 made the discovery of a lifetime. While examining rocks on the island's coast he came across a rock platform containing a set of ancient animal footprints. The tracks have since been dated to almost 400 million years ago and are regarded as among the earliest footprints known to science, and certainly the oldest known footprints in Europe.

A long-lost relative

Hundreds of millions of years ago, all vertebrate life existed in the seas. The oceans were filled with many different types of primitive fish-like creatures. Conditions on dry land were totally inhospitable. Then, little by little, life began to take hold above water. First came plants, then later came the first land animals. These creatures were the ancestors of most animals familiar to us today - all amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals, including of course, humans themselves. What these animals looked like, what possessed them to leave the oceans, and how and why they evolved lungs to breathe air are all questions fundamental to our understanding of our planet and ourselves. Time has erased most traces of these first land creatures, so when evidence is uncovered its importance cannot be underestimated.

The wet concrete effect

385 million years ago, most of Southern Ireland was part of a gigantic flood-plain near the equator, much the same as Bangladesh is today. Every so often, massive floods inundated the region, depositing large quantities of silt and sand each time. At one stage a four-legged animal2 walked across these silts as they were drying out. Its tracks were preserved, just as if it had walked across wet concrete. After further floodings and aeons of compaction, these footprints turned to stone, looking almost exactly the same as the day they were created. It was only in the last few thousand years that the tracks once again saw the light of day as a result of persistent erosion by the sea.

Footsteps in the bedrock

The Trackway itself is on a coastal rock platform3, not far from the Valentia Lifeboat Station. The platform is relatively small - about the size of two car-park spaces. Imprinted on the rock are 150 distinct prints from at least one animal. Although no fossil skeletons have been found, the tracks provide strong indicators of the type of animal that made them. Between some of the prints is a distinct furrow, indicating that the animal's torso was low off the ground - comparable in shape perhaps to a large iguana. The animal itself was around the size of a small dog such as a cocker spaniel.

Looking into the past

The Trackway site has been bought by the Irish Government and has already become a major site of scientific interest in Ireland. A viewing area for tourists is under development. For optimal views of the footprints it is best to view them in the early morning or late afternoon when the sun casts the prints into relief.

Photos (temporary)

(This link should not be included in the edited guide, but just in case you would like to see the footprints for yourself, here are some photos I took of the trackway quite recently.)

Tetrapod Trackway Photos

1Iwan Stossel2"Tetrapod" means "Four legged"3The trackway abuts the sea itself, and is raised about 1.5m (5 feet) above sea level. During rough weather and high tides, waves crash over the trackway.

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