AI Article Synopsis

  • This study provides a detailed 3D analysis of how lions modify the bones of zebras and wildebeests at their appendicular skeletons in Tarangire National Park, Tanzania.
  • Utilizing a new software for spatial documentation, it reveals specific damage patterns on bones, highlighting that lions primarily inflict serious damage on the proximal ends of limb bones while leaving less damage on mid-shaft sections.
  • The findings suggest that analysis of tooth marks can help identify not only the presence of lions in bone assemblages but also potential interactions with early human scavengers at lion kills.

Article Abstract

Here, we present the first three-dimensional taphonomic analysis of a carnivore-modified assemblage at the anatomical scale of the appendicular skeleton. A sample of ten carcasses composed of two taxa (zebra and wildebeest) consumed by wild lions in the Tarangire National Park (Tanzania) has been used to determine element-specific lion damage patterns. This study presents a novel software for the 3D spatial documentation of bone surface modifications at the anatomical level. Combined with spatial statistics, the present analysis has been able to conclude that despite variable degrees of competition during carcass consumption, lions generate bilateral patterning consisting of substantial damage of proximal ends of stylopodials and zeugopodials, moderate damage of the distal ends of femora and marginal damage of distal ends of humeri and zeugopodials. Of special interest is, specifically, the patterning of tooth marks on shafts according to element, since these are crucial to determine not only the type of carnivore involved in any given bone assemblage, but also the interaction with other agents (namely, hominins, in the past). Lions leave few tooth marks on mid-shaft sections, mostly concentrated on certain sections and orientations of stylopodials and, to a lesser extent, of the proximal tibia. Redundant occurrence of tooth marks on certain bone sections renders them as crucial to attest lion agency in carcass initial consumption. Indirectly, this can also be used to determine whether hominins ever acquired carcasses at lion kills.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7925545PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-84246-1DOI Listing

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