Abstract

Tracks and trackways of newborns, calves and juveniles attributed to straight-tusked elephants were found in the MIS 5 site (Upper Pleistocene) known as the Matalascañas Trampled Surface (MTS) at Huelva, SW Spain. Evidence of a snapshot of social behaviour, especially parental care, can be determined from the concentration of elephant tracks and trackways, and especially from apparently contemporaneous converging trackways, of small juvenile and larger, presumably young adult female tracks. The size frequency of the tracks enabled us to infer body mass and age distribution of the animals that crossed the MTS. Comparisons of the MTS demographic frequency with the morphology of the fore- and hind limbs of extant and fossil proboscideans shed light into the reproductive ecology of the straight-tusked elephant, Palaeloxodon antiquus. The interdune pond habitat appeared to have been an important water and food resource for matriarchal herds of straight-tusked elephants and likely functioned as a reproductive habitat, with only the rare presence of adult and older males in the MTS. The preservation of this track record in across a paleosol surface, although heavily trampled by different animals, including Neanderthals, over a short time frame, permitted an exceptional view into short-term intraspecific trophic interactions occurring in the Last Interglacial coastal habitat. Therefore, it is hypothesized that Neanderthals visited MTS for hunting or scavenging on weakened or dead elephants, and more likely calves.

Highlights

  • The straight-tusked elephant Palaeoloxodon antiquus Falconer & Cautley is among the most powerful proboscideans that has ever lived, and one of the most robust of the Elephantinae species, with very wide heads carrying extremely long tusks

  • In the Iberian Peninsula, the straight-tusked elephant prevailed in Mediterranean evergreen woodland which was widespread during the interglacial phases, such as the Last I­ nterglacial[5]

  • This is especially true in southern Spain, where P. antiquus replaced M. trogontherii during Middle ­Pleistocene[6]

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Summary

Introduction

The straight-tusked elephant Palaeoloxodon antiquus Falconer & Cautley is among the most powerful proboscideans that has ever lived, and one of the most robust of the Elephantinae species, with very wide heads carrying extremely long tusks. By comparison with the study of Marano and ­Palombo[32] (based on the progress of eruption and degree of wear of teeth compared to extant elephants), and the body mass correlation of Larramendi et al.[1] for calculating the age of P. antiquus, our MTS ages obtained from the application of the regression curve of Lee and M­ oss[33] are underestimated and must be analysed as minimum age approximations for track lengths corresponding to adolescent and adult animals, especially for males.

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