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66
Mostly True Australia

20,000-year-old human footprints found in Australia include tracks of a man running barefoot with speeds matching a modern Olympic sprinter.

The claims regarding the 20,000-year-old human footprints in Australia are supported by evidence from multiple medium-reliability sources including National Geographic and scientific articles. The discovery at Mungo National Park is well-documented and suggests ancient humans did indeed make these tracks. The particular claim of a man's running speed matching an Olympic sprinter is speculative but widely discussed, with some contextual support in academic discourse on human evolutionary traits related to running.

June 23, 2026 Language: en 3 claims analyzed

Individual Claims

83
True Archaeology
20,000-year-old human footprints were found in Australia.
Corroborated by multiple sources including National Geographic, which describes the Mungo National Park findings. This is a well-documented archaeological discovery.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score 90
Web Consensus Weight 50
Source Quality Score 90
Source Quality Weight 25
Llm Reasoning Score 85
Llm Reasoning Weight 25
Weighted Total 83
Evidence Summary Multiple web sources corroborate, including National Geographic.
70
Mostly True Archaeology
Tracks include footprints of a man who was running barefoot in clay.
Evidence suggests that some footprints indicate running, with descriptions of humans sprinting mentioned in several articles. The exactness of these descriptions varies, but the context is supported.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score 75
Web Consensus Weight 50
Source Quality Score 70
Source Quality Weight 25
Llm Reasoning Score 75
Llm Reasoning Weight 25
Weighted Total 70
Evidence Summary Web sources, like National Geographic, suggest running footprints.
46
Mixed Archaeology
The man was running at speeds estimated to match a modern Olympic sprinter, about 37 km/h.
Claim is speculative with multiple articles discussing it. The estimation of speeds comparable to Olympic sprinters lacks unanimous support and is more a theoretical extrapolation based on the footprints.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score 50
Web Consensus Weight 50
Source Quality Score 40
Source Quality Weight 25
Llm Reasoning Score 40
Llm Reasoning Weight 25
Weighted Total 46
Evidence Summary Speculative claims based on footprint analysis, discussions in scientific contexts.

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