Late Pleistocene remains of cave bear cubs from a cave at Hochschwab (Styria, Austria)

Author(s)
Nadja Kavcik-Graumann, Federica Alberti, Doris Döppes, Ronny Friedrich, Susanne Lindauer, Lukas Plan, Julia Stockhammer, Gerhard Withalm, Gernot Rabeder
Abstract

On the Hochschwab karst massif in the east of the Northern Calcareous Alps (NCA), the remains of four cave bear cubs were found in a sub vertical cave that opens at 2070 m a.s.l. (Figure 1). There is severe pathology on two individually related mandibular fragments that indicate that the cubs could have fallen into the cave through narrow gaps. There are no remains of adult bears, however. According to the morphology of the teeth, DNA analysis, and C14 data, these juvenile bones and teeth belong to Ursus spelaeus eremus, which lived here at least from 46,000 to 39,000 years before present. This proves that all large plateaus of the NCA were inhabited by cave bears of Ursus spelaeus group during the so-called "cave bear era" of the middle Late Pleistocene. It is discussed which palaeoclimatological conclusions can be drawn from it.

Organisation(s)
Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology, Department of Palaeontology
External organisation(s)
Universität Potsdam, Curt-Engelhorn-Center Archaeometry gGmbH, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien (NHM), Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen, University of Vienna
Pages
18-18
No. of pages
1
Publication date
2021
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
105118 Palaeontology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/520e2a82-5198-48f7-8de4-0942b6eecda7