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By Ice Age Spotted Hyenas Removed, Cracked, Nibbled
and Chewed Skeleton Remains of Coelodonta antiquitatis (BLUMENBACH
1799) from the Lower Weichselian (Upper Pleistocene) Freeland Prey
Deposit Site Bad Wildungen-Biedensteg (Hessia, NW Germany)
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| Cajus G. Diedrich |
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1.92 MB |
Eighty percent of 74 fragmentary cranial
and postcranial bones of the Upper Pleistocene woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta
antiquitatis (BLUMENBACH 1799) from the Lower Weichselian (65.000-90.000
BP, OIS 5, Upper Pleistocene) ice age spotted hyena open air prey deposit
site Biedensteg at Bad Wildungen (Hessia, NW-Germany) exhibit crack, bite
and nibbling marks. The skeletal remains represent at least five woolly
rhinoceros individuals. Individual carcasses of an early adult female
and a calf have been identified. Both show carcass disrupting and destruction
by the hyenas in form of partly articulated bones, bone cracking, nibbling
and chewing. Articulated parts of the skeletons were removed from the
carcass and were stored in mud pits with other prey bones. The long bones,
which are filled completely by the bone spongiosa, were generally not
cracked, but are always gnawn intensively starting from the joints, while
the hyenas mostly left the bone shaft intact. Such bone spongiosa was
also not uncommon in hyena coprolites at the site. Typical bone destruction
stages are represented. Those described in detail here include the cranium,
scapula, humerus, ulna, radius, femur, tibia, pelvis but also vertebrae
and costae. The woolly rhinoceros bones at the Bad Wildungen-Biedensteg
freeland prey deposit site take 53% of the prey animal bones of Crocuta
crocuta spelaea (Goldfuss 1823) and prove with other prey bones a mixed
feeding onto all huge ice age mammals. Remains of Mammuthus antiquitatis,
Bison priscus, Equus ferus przewalskii, Megaloceros giganteus, Rangifer
tarandus, Ursus spelaeus and C. c. spelaea itself are included in the
hyeana-modified fauna with 5-12% each showing signs of scavenging. The
high percentage of the Coelodonta bones results more of the fact, that
those are, such as mammoth bones, the most massive ones of ice age animals.
The taphonomic comparison of C. antiquitatis carcasses and bones of Westphalian
cave and freeland hyena den and prey deposit sites indicate the most important
destruction impact of woolly rhinoceros carcasses by the Upper Pleistocene
spotted hyena.
Keywords: WOOLLY RHINOCEROS, SKELETON AND BONE TAPHONOMY, ICE AGE
SPOTTED HYENA, PREY DEPOSIT FREELAND SITE, EARLY UPPER PLEISTOCENE
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Possible Taphonomic Bias in the Preservation of Phosphatic Macroinvertebrates
in the Uppermost Maquoketa Formation (Upper Ordovician) of Northeastern
Iowa (North-Central USA)
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| Heyo Van Iten, Michael Lichtenwalter,
Juliana de Moraes Leme, Marcello Guimarães Simões |
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421 KB |
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Examination of acid digestion residues can be
an indispensable tool in the detection and identification of fragmentary
remains of rare and/or fragile, macroinvertebrate fossils preserved
in shallow shelf carbonates. We recovered submicroscopic fragments
of phosphatic conulariid, Sphenothallus (Cnidaria), and ?Trematis
(Linguliformea) skeletons from a slab of highly fossiliferous lime
packstone from the uppermost Brainard Shale Member of the Maquoketa
Formation (Richmondian, Upper Ordovician) of northeastern Iowa,
USA. The bedding planes of this and four similar Brainard Member
slabs (total upper bedding surface area approximately 0.38 m2) lack
macrofossil specimens of these three taxa, which have never previously
been reported from this rock unit. Analysis of the preservation
of the abundant calcitic fossils revealed evidence of wave current
action, including pervasive disarticulation of the brachiopods,
echinoderms, and trilobites, and bimodal alignment of the narrowly
conical Cornulites shells and elongate Eoplectodonta valves, almost
all of which are also oriented convex up. These results are consistent
with the hypothesis that storm wave activity on the Brainard Member
sea floor fragmented originally macroscopic conulariid, Sphenothallus,
and ?Trematis skeletons, making it difficult to detect these taxa
at low magnifications and thus making it appear that they were absent
in the original bottom community. Together with results of similar
studies of other Paleozoic rock units, our investigation suggests
that there is a systematic, taphonomic bias against conulariids,
Sphenothallus, and linguliform (phosphatic) brachiopods in storm-influenced
shelf deposits.
Keywords: TAPHONOMY, PRESERVATIONAL BIAS,
PHOSPHATIC FOSSILS, CONULARIIDS, Sphenothallus, ORDOVICIAN
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| Taphonomic analysis of Plant Remains
Contained in Carnivore Scats in Andean South America |
| Mariana Mondini, M. Fernanda Rodríguez
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759 KB |
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Plant remains contained in carnivore scats from
Puna rockshelters in the Argentinean Andean Puna are analysed. Only
31% of the scats (n=16) contained plant remains, all of them corresponding
to the Poaceae family. Most of these are leaf and culm parts, and
only in one case seeds were identified, possibly also corresponding
to the same family. The lack of fleshy fruit seeds suggests a different
pattern of plant intake as compared to other areas, possibly just
for purging here. Plant anatomical structure has suffered no damage
from digestive acids but some softening, and all anatomical features
are perfectly recognizable. Plants can thus then enter the fossil
record in rockshelters in the region via carnivore scats, and this
should be taken into account, especially as these are the same kind
of plants most commonly introduced by humans in the past according
to the regional archaeological record.
Keywords: CARNIVORE SCATS, PLANT REMAINS, POACEAE, TAPHONOMY,
ROCKSHELTERS, ANDES, SOUTH AMERICA
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