SIZE OF THE CAVE BEAR POPULATION AND SKELETAL DISTRIBUTION FROM URŞILOR CAVE, ROMANIA

Abstract

Spatial distribution analyses of fossil bones are often used in cave taphonomy for i) assessing directly the size of a given fossil population and ii) indirectly, for palaeo-environmental reconstructions. Urşilor Cave from northwestern Romania hosts one of the richest MIS 3 cave bear bone assemblages of Europe, and as the nature of the bone deposition was not settled yet, the study of the size of cave bear population and the distribution of the skeletal element was needed. More than 11,500 cave bear skeletal elements (NISPtotal = 11, 511), derived from 105 individuals (MNIcanines = 105) were extracted from the palaeontological excavation (ca. 9 m2) from the lower level of the cave and documented (photographed, mapped, and topographically measured). Almost 58% of all analyzed bones and teeth are concentrated in three quadrants of the excavation (C1, D1 and E2); the bones’ density decreases in the D4 and A1 quadrants. Based on the obtained results on the spatial distribution of the cave bear bones, we assume that the studied bone assemblage should be now regarded as a consequence of a cave trap (deposition in situ) while the hypothesis of fluvial transport (previously assumed) becomes questionable

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