Abstract

Analytic models have been developed to reconstruct early hominin behaviour, especially their subsistence patterns, revealed mainly through taphonomic analyses of archaeofaunal assemblages. Taphonomic research is used to discern which agents (carnivores, humans or both) generate the bone assemblages recovered at archaeological sites. Taphonomic frameworks developed during the last decades show that the only large-sized carnivores in African biomes able to create bone assemblages are leopards and hyenas. A carnivore-made bone assemblage located in the short-grassland ecological unit of the Serengeti (within Olduvai Gorge) was studied. Taphonomic analyses of this assemblage including skeletal part representation, bone density, breakage patterns and anatomical distribution of tooth marks, along with an ecological approach to the prey selection made by large carnivores of the Serengeti, were carried out. The results show that this bone assemblage may be the first lion-accumulated assemblage documented, although other carnivores (namely spotted hyenas) may have also intervened through postdepositional ravaging. This first faunal assemblage potentially created by lions constitutes a new framework for neotaphonomic studies. Since lions may accumulate carcasses under exceptional circumstances, such as those documented at the site reported here, this finding may have important consequences for interpretations of early archaeological and paleontological sites, which provide key information about human evolution.

Highlights

  • The lion (Panthera leo Linnaeus, 1758) is the largest carnivore of Africa and one of the best studied mammal species in the Serengeti National Park, as well as in other African ecosystems [1,2,3]

  • This could indicate a complete transport of the carcasses carried out by the carnivore, which is typical of felids

  • We report here that the purported lion behavior that may account for this bone accumulation is rather exceptional and caused by specific ecological factors that determine that the area is occupied by nomad lions

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Summary

Introduction

The lion (Panthera leo Linnaeus, 1758) is the largest carnivore of Africa and one of the best studied mammal species in the Serengeti National Park, as well as in other African ecosystems [1,2,3]. The genus Panthera first appears about 3.85–3.63 million years ago at Laetoli in PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0153797. Lions as Bone Accumulators had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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