Hackney girl finds ancient bear tooth on Norfolk beach

  • Published
Etta with bear toothImage source, Thea Ferner
Image caption,

Eagle-eyed Etta spotted the bear tooth on a family holiday - and experts were blown away by the discovery

A nine-year-old fossil hunter who discovered a 700,000-year-old bear tooth on a beach said it was "exciting as it might be a major breakthrough in history". Etta found what she thought was "a fossilised bit of wood" at West Runton in Norfolk during the summer. More fossils have been unearthed in the past decade as erosion of the coast's soft, glacial cliffs speeds up, so what new information do they reveal about Norfolk's Deep History Coast, external?

Etta, from Hackney in London, made her discovery while on a family holiday on 22 July.

"I was looking down and there it was," she said.

"I thought it was a fossilised bit of wood so I put it in my pocket, and when we got back to the car park we showed it to a fossil expert and she fell off her chair.

"She said, 'People search for 20 years and don't find anything this good' and told us it was a bear tooth."

Image source, Thea Ferner
Image caption,

Etta initially thought the tooth was a piece of ancient wood, but it has since been confirmed as a bear's tooth

The nine-year-old, and her sisters aged seven and five, "really got into fossils" after attending a Norfolk Wildlife Trust , externalfossil hunting course earlier in the year, their mother Thea Ferner explained.

Etta has loaned the tooth, which is about 9cm long (3in) from tip to root, to Norfolk Museums Service, external geologist David Waterhouse after meeting him at a fossil identification event at Cromer Museum.

"To find a perfect massive bear canine is a first for me in 16 years working here," the senior curator of natural history said.

"We normally find lots of deer fossils, for example, but as you go up the food chain, you find fewer and fewer carnivores like the bear."

He has identified it as an ancestor of the common brown bear, external.

Image source, Dr Peter G. Hoare
Image caption,

About 1km (0.6 miles) of West Runton beach has been excavated by Norfolk Museums Service experts

Image source, Norfolk Museums Service/Nick Arber
Image caption,

The Norfolk landscape 700,000 years ago would have had hyenas, lions, deer and mammoths

Dr Waterhouse said "more extreme weather" is speeding up coastal erosion, which is "a double-edged sword - people's homes and livelihoods are at risk, but it also means that amazing finds such as the Happisburgh footprints are being discovered".

Norfolk's Deep History Coast is a 22-mile (35km) stretch of coastline between Weybourne and Cart Gap.

Some of the more spectacular discoveries include the oldest archaeological site in northern Europe at Happisburgh, where 800,000-year-old human footprints were revealed in 2013. West Runton is also home to the oldest and largest fossilised mammoth ever found in the UK.

They are being unearthed in the Cromer Forest Bed geological layer, which at West Runton is 600,000 to 700,000 years old, said Dr Waterhouse.

Image source, Dr David M.G. Waterhouse
Image caption,

The 700,000-year-old West Runton mammoth - an ancestor of the woolly mammoth - was discovered in 1990

The discoveries have pushed back archaeologists' understanding of life by hundreds of thousands of years - and they have kept coming over the past 10 years, Dr Waterhouse explained.

"More human footprints have been found at Happisburgh in 2019 and at West Runton in 2017 a rhino was found, more hand-axes and stone tools are turning up," he said.

"A researcher from Italy looked at the deer fossil collection at Norwich Castle Museum and realised that one of the deer was a new species related to the fallow deer.

"We even know more about the temperature and environment in Norfolk 700,000 years ago thanks to pollen and pine cone finds."

Image source, Norfolk Museums Service
Image caption,

Two more sets of human footprints have been revealed at Happisburgh

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The footprints are believed to be from a family group of early humans called Homo antecessor

These revealed the climate would have been like modern Poland's, with similar summers but much colder winters than today.

"All these little nuances are building up to this rich picture of what animals and plants were thriving 700,000 years ago," he said.

The earliest humans were Homo antecessor or Pioneer Man and they migrated across a landmass known as Dogger Land, which joined the British coast to present-day Germany and the Netherlands.

Dr Waterhouse said humans were still "a rare species... but everything was just right in Norfolk" for them, from wildfowl, game, shellfish "and crucially flint" to turn into sharp tools.

Image source, Dr David M.G. Waterhouse
Image caption,

Early humans would have lived alongside animals now considered exotic in Britain, such as the spotted hyena

"Humans were dodging hyenas, lions and bears and living alongside roe and fallow deer, beavers and mammoths," he said.

"It would have been a weird mixture of the familiar, the extinct and things we think are exotic now, in a landscape not that different from the Norfolk Broads."

He welcomed "responsible" fossil hunters, external like Etta who do not dig into cliffs, report their finds and keep a note of when and where they made them.

Image source, Thea Ferner
Image caption,

Etta and her sisters Juno (left) and Cleo (right) have set up a fossil museum in a shed in their garden

The nine-year-old said she planned to keep on fossil hunting.

Mrs Ferner said: "The family joke is there's a whole bear out there waiting to be found."

However, Etta has another animal in her sights - "a giant beaver - a tooth of a giant beaver, that would be good".

Image source, Thea Ferner
Image caption,

Finding bear remains is very unusual, although a Victorian fossil hunter donated a bear skull to Cromer Museum

Find BBC News: East of England on Facebook, external, Instagram, external and Twitter, external. If you have a story suggestion email eastofenglandnews@bbc.co.uk, external

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.